Not exact matches
Just before the teenage years, «the
rate of growth for many skills kind of slows down,» says Deborah Waber, an associate professor of psychiatry
at Harvard University Medical School's Children's Hospital Boston and the lead author of a paper that reports the results of the behavioral component of the NIH Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) Study of
Normal Brain Development.
All of the owlets subsequently fledged and returned
at normal rates to breed in the following year, indicating that there were no long - term adverse effects of eves - dropping on their sleeping
brains.
After analyzing their MRIs over the following years, Lin and his colleagues, reporting in an upcoming issue of Neuroimage, say those participants whose hearing was already impaired
at the start of the sub-study had accelerated
rates of
brain atrophy compared to those with
normal hearing.