A PHP Error was encountered

Severity: Warning

Message: session_start(): Failed to initialize storage module: user (path: /var/www/session)

Filename: Session/Session.php

Line Number: 143

Hello Brain • Brain Health
Join the Conversation

Decline is not inevitable

As we get older, it’s common to become a little forgetful and slower at working things out, but a more serious decline in cognitive function is not automatically a part of getting older. Science is now looking to ‘healthy agers’ to find out more about the formula for wellness in later years.  

The upsides of ageing

Ageing has its perks. As we age our vocabulary improves, we hold a more positive outlook and we can better deal with challenging situations. Watch this interview with Professor Ian Robertson to find out more.

Just like the rest of your body, your brain changes with age. Physically some parts get a bit smaller and functionally perhaps some parts slow down a little and you might become more forgetful and perhaps less quick at working out that restaurant bill or solving a complex problem.

But a serious decline in brain health is not always part and parcel of growing old. And just as everyone’s outer looks and inner health change at different rates with age, how your cognitive function changes with age is also quite an individual thing.

Of course genetics can play a role – some people have a genetic makeup that protects them from cognitive decline or it makes them more susceptible to it. But genes aren’t everything. In fact the environment your brain lives in – what you eat, how you exercise physically, your social life, your attitude to life and the intellectual enrichment you are exposed to –  can have an effect on brain health as you age.

And there are plenty of role models who have lived into their 80s, 90s and beyond while thinking sharply, creating and living life to the full.

Share this page:


Keep sharp and get older

Think for a moment: do you know anyone who has lived (or maybe is still living) into their 80s or 90s and they could still win any debate hands down? Maybe ...

Read More

Okinawa & Sardinia – addresses for a long & healthy life

One of the challenges in studying human ageing is to find enough subjects who live for long enough in a similar environment. That...

Read More

The agers who inspire

Stereotypes about ageing are there to be challenged. Who says you have to slow down as you get older and sit quietly instead of ...

Read More


The wider world web - what are other websites saying about the brain?

Protect against cognitive decline

Researchers at Oregon State University are using genetic therapy to target a particular type of receptor in the mouse brain to see if it might help protect against cognitive decline. 

Go Explore

Phenomenon of ‘super-agers’

A study at Northwestern University in the United States is looking at the phenomenon of ‘super-agers’.

Go Explore

More Health Topics


What can I do to keep my brain healthy?


Neuroplasticity


Cognitive reserve – keeping resilience in mind