A «critical window» of
brain plasticity explains why certain eye conditions such as lazy eye can be corrected during early childhood but not later in life.
Not exact matches
Mara Andrione
explaining one of her thesis projects published in Andrione et al. 2017 Morphofunctional experience - dependent
plasticity in the honeybee
brain.
«Scientists now know that there's much more
plasticity of the
brain than we previously thought,»
explains Elizabeth Zelinski, PhD, a cognitive psychologist and Nintendo consultant who's also dean of the Leonard Davis School of Gerontology at the University of Southern California.
Child psychology
explains that at early ages the
brain has good
plasticity, i.e. better willingness to acquire new knowledge and new skills that can be organized and solidify for years; and, due to the fact that what comprises the basic skills of emotional education are the skills and competencies, they can be learned.