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Bilingualism may maintain protection against Alzheimer's

ScienceDaily
Summary
Nutrition label

80% Informative

Bilingualism may maintain protection against Alzheimer's Neuroimaging reveals larger, healthier hippocampi in patients who speak two languages.

Concordia University researchers use neuroimaging methods to examine brain resilience in regions of the brain linked to language and aging.

The hippocampus in bilinguals with Alzheimer's disease was noticeably larger than those who were monolingual.

VR Score

91

Informative language

98

Neutral language

56

Article tone

semi-formal

Language

English

Language complexity

68

Offensive language

possibly offensive

Hate speech

not hateful

Attention-grabbing headline

not detected

Known propaganda techniques

not detected

Time-value

long-living

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no external sources

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