Elderly woman describing a picture in a lab with speech pauses indicated, related to cognitive study
Elderly woman describing a picture in a lab with speech pauses indicated, related to cognitive study
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Pauses and filler words in picture descriptions were linked to executive function in a Baycrest-led study

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Small speech timing habits—such as silent pauses, “um” and “uh,” and difficulty finding words—were associated with performance on standard executive-function tests in a study by researchers at Baycrest, the University of Toronto and York University.

In the study, participants were shown detailed images and asked to describe them in their own words while their speech was recorded. They also completed established tests designed to measure executive function.

Researchers used artificial intelligence to analyze the recordings, identifying hundreds of subtle features in speech timing and fluency, including the length and frequency of pauses, the use of filler words such as “um” and “uh,” and other timing-related patterns. Those speech features predicted how well participants performed on executive-function tests even after the analysis adjusted for age, sex and education.

The researchers said executive function tends to weaken with age and can be affected early in dementia, while traditional cognitive testing can be time-consuming and harder to repeat frequently because of practice effects. They argued that speech-based assessment could eventually provide a simpler, repeatable way to monitor cognitive changes, though they emphasized that longer-term studies tracking people over time are needed before such tools can be used to distinguish normal aging from early disease.

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Illustration of glowing whole-brain neural networks coordinating efficiently, representing a University of Notre Dame study on general intelligence.
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Study points to whole-brain network coordination as a key feature of general intelligence

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University of Notre Dame researchers report evidence that general intelligence is associated with how efficiently and flexibly brain networks coordinate across the whole connectome, rather than being localized to a single “smart” region. The findings, published in Nature Communications, are based on neuroimaging and cognitive data from 831 Human Connectome Project participants and an additional 145 adults from the INSIGHT Study.

New research from the University of Southern California suggests that subtle declines in brain blood flow and oxygen delivery may be early indicators of Alzheimer's disease. The study, published in Alzheimer's and Dementia, used noninvasive scans to connect vascular health with amyloid plaques and hippocampal shrinkage. These findings highlight the role of brain circulation in the disease process beyond traditional markers like amyloid and tau.

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A study involving 73 people with mild cognitive impairment or early dementia found that tailored treatment plans targeting nutritional deficiencies, infections and other factors led to significant cognitive improvements after nine months. Participants in the intervention group saw their overall cognitive scores rise by 13.7 points, while the control group declined by 4.5 points. The approach combines medical interventions with lifestyle changes like diet, exercise and cognitive training.

Researchers at the University of Toronto Scarborough have found that feeling mentally sharp on a given day can boost productivity by up to 40 minutes. The study, published in Science Advances, tracked university students over 12 weeks and connected clearer thinking to setting and achieving bigger goals. Factors like sleep and workload influence these daily fluctuations.

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Researchers at Monash University have found that adults with ADHD experience more frequent episodes of sleep-like brain activity during wakefulness, which correlates with attention lapses. The study, published in the Journal of Neuroscience, links these brief shifts to errors, slower reactions, and increased sleepiness during tasks. Lead author Elaine Pinggal suggests this mechanism underlies attention difficulties in ADHD.

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