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327 Sentences With "cognitively"

How to use cognitively in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "cognitively" and check conjugation/comparative form for "cognitively". Mastering all the usages of "cognitively" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Living in a more cognitively complex world creates more cognitively complex creatures.
If the situation were reversed — if a cognitively damaged woman who could not live on her own became pregnant by a cognitively normal man — assault charges would most likely have been brought.
I grew up in Jordan; cognitively, I was formed there.
Emotionally and cognitively, they are all extremely smart and thoughtful.
"Cognitively everything looks good," White told PEOPLE back in October.
You want your team to be cognitively diverse but also small.
Some of Maria's victims weren't elderly or cognitively impaired at all.
He is cognitively wired to think like a divinely inspired king.
Trump is not cognitively up to the job of the presidency.
"She's on track cognitively and physically for kids her age," says Kristal.
That's where a bit of organization goes a long way, cognitively speaking.
But that doesn't mean they don't cognitively understand what those feelings are.
I react mostly cognitively, rather than it being emotions making me react.
But cognitively, they can only track six fellow birds at a time.
While children with SMA still grow cognitively, their bodies continue to deteriorate.
Research suggests that goals cognitively activate stimuli which help us achieve them.
I'm suggesting that sex involving the cognitively disabled isn't, ipso facto, assault.
A low enough score could indicate that the patient is cognitively impaired.
"Even though he's somewhat cognitively compromised, he's still a funny kid," Siltzer says.
Among patients who were robust or only cognitively impaired, around 12 percent died.
Skipping the sense-making step makes for fragile understanding and cognitively expensive memorization.
If you&aposre working on something that&aposs "cognitively demanding," it can interfere.
A central issue in the trial was whether D.J. is profoundly cognitively impaired, as the prosecution contended and the court seemed to accept, or is competent cognitively but unable to communicate his thoughts without highly skilled assistance, as the defense contended.
Having two versions of reality constantly clashing in public is cognitively and emotionally exhausting.
Among those who were physically frail but not cognitively impaired, mortality was 25 percent.
Drugs are so tricky, because they convince you, cognitively, of things that aren't true.
And these slower processes are deep learning, the ones that are more cognitively challenging.
A clinical trial at UCLA, using the treatment that has helped Ryan cognitively, continues.
The more people stayed on those diets, said McEvoy, the better they functioned cognitively.
It's simply a means by which people can serve, cognitively, the sentences they receive.
Another study found that bilinguals were better able to recover cognitively from a stroke.
Younger children, she said, can cognitively pick up languages much faster than older ones.
We want to protect people who are cognitively impaired from abuse, including sexual abuse.
He has never read the Constitution, is in fact cognitively incapable of doing so.
People who are undecided on issues do not, cognitively speaking, occupy a set middle.
It's less cognitively demanding than texting, and way more reliable than dictating to Siri.
"How cognitively active you are, what you read and things like that," Wilson said.
Relatedly, he is cognitively inclined to transform failures into successes and construct intricate rationalizations.
Many AI systems today are still less capable (cognitively speaking) than a 6-year-old.
This, he adds, could line up with sex being cognitively beneficial and helpful with focus.
We're bad at assessing risk, we get taken in by novelty, and we're cognitively lazy.
In the group that was both frail and cognitively impaired, 11 of 26 patients died.
The researchers also tested the children cognitively, looking at measures of language and early literacy.
At the time, roughly a third of cognitively impaired nursing home residents were tube-fed.
"You could make the request when you were cognitively able to do it," he said.
For the new study, the researchers analyzed PET scans of 205 adults, all cognitively normal.
I looked at the history of standardized spelling and what misspelling says about you cognitively.
Researchers studied 101 cognitively normal people, average age 63, who completed well-validated sleep questionnaires.
Without these medications, and therapy, I would lose the capacity to function cognitively and emotionally.
He was so cognitively impacted as a result of the surgery that he set aside the
There is nothing cognitively challenging about the task; levels of education make no difference to performance.
We'll see if in a couple of years the people with hearing aids are cognitively sharper.
They are cognitively straightjacketed men who have accepted a narrative of America as a closed system.
Like us, orcas are self-aware, cognitively skilled individuals that communicate using their pod's signature dialect.
The patient, when completing the directive and appointing a health care agent, must be cognitively sound.
At his next doctor's appointment, they all agreed: He was too cognitively impaired to drive anymore.
"Cognitively unimpaired, widowed older adults were particularly susceptible to Alzheimer disease clinical progression," the study concluded.
Read more >> 'Deep work' is a term for focusing without distraction on a cognitively demanding task.
"This doesn't mean that frail or cognitively impaired patients should not ever undergo surgery," Seib added.
Daryle cognitively functions on a first-grade level – he struggles expressing emotion, dressing himself and communicating effectively.
Accordingly, denying these creatures self-determination is disputing that they're scientifically proven to be cognitively sophisticated beings.
The victim, who is cognitively impaired as well as deaf and mute, weighed less than 70 lbs.
"In cognitively demanding fields, there are no naturals," Gladwell wrote after critics took issue with his premise.
Not just Echo, that'll be an interesting part, but this idea of cognitively ergonomic, natural conversational UI.
Does the fact that this man isn't ''cognitively normal'' mean that he has entirely forfeited such rights?
The study further found that plants make workers more physically, cognitively and emotionally involved in their work.
Alternatively, he could be so delusional or cognitively impaired as to have no real grasp of reality.
Cognitively I'm not sure a kid gets why you can boss Alexa around but not a person.
In the 1940s and '21985s, women were often seen as more mentally unstable, and cognitively weaker, than men.
And it's true that watching a movie with subtitles is cognitively different than watching one without, experts say.
The common retort to such concerns is that humans are far more cognitively adaptable than beasts of burden.
For those who have suffered from a stroke, the incident can often leave them confused and cognitively impaired.
"It has this kind of capacity to grab you emotionally before it grabs you cognitively," Dr. Schlozman said.
THREE: I mean, I actually need to because how does the headache of the concussed and cognitively unrested.
Analytic evaluations are cognitively taxing and may involve searching for information like knowledge drawn from books or experts.
The new findings of symbolic thinking show that Neanderthals and modern humans were cognitively indistinguishable, the researchers said.
I have to cognitively suppress my natural instincts, and this is the way I'm going to overcome it.
You can bend the curve toward more cognitively and financially rewarding work, and get great results in the bargain.
The widely accepted assumption underlying all of this is that deception is cognitively more demanding than telling the truth.
Researchers looked at 1,639 adults in their mid-70s who either were normal cognitively or had mild cognitive decline.
Targeted violence has an end goal that has been cognitively processed and planned for a significant period of time.
I don't think humans as a species are cognitively fit to really grasp the threat we're currently faced with.
More from Tonic: But that's shifting in favor of less-restrictive supports for intellectually, developmentally, and cognitively disabled people.
Donna Kaye Hill realized that her 80-year-old mother was faltering cognitively when her phone suddenly stopped working.
People who can't hear well often become socially isolated and deprived of stimuli that keep the brain cognitively engaged.
Cal Newport: Deep work is my term for the activity of focusing without distraction on a cognitively demanding task.
"The older person, who is cognitively fine, is just excluded, referred to as 'he' or 'she,'" Dr. Adelman said.
Still, there have been times when Bonnell wondered aloud whether the American population is cognitively equipped to govern itself.
When do a robot assistant's prompts to a senior to call a friend become coercion of the cognitively frail?
If a baby is manipulating objects or trying to climb stairs, the baby is cognitively, as well as motorically, engaged.
According to WBIR, Vanmeter's caretaker claimed she was cognitively disabled and had the mental capacity of a 13-year-old.
"The hooker in this whole thing is you can have individuals loaded with plaques that are cognitively normal," he said.
Even now, men who were abused have the feeling like they're the only ones, even if they cognitively know differently.
Before the rebellion, the hosts themselves were reborn all the time, but their loops kept them cognitively frozen in place.
"We're all cognitively lazy," says Brad Klontz, a certified financial planner and associate professor of financial psychology at Creighton University.
Attracting amazing, cognitively diverse people, bounded by strong culture, will empower your startup to over-achieve with very little resources.
With practice, the person should be able to cognitively displace the old, bad dream with a new, more positive one.
Research shows that children below the age of 8 years are cognitively and psychologically defenseless against the manipulation of advertisements.
But one in five said they would pursue it if they became cognitively impaired, were suffering or burdening loved ones.
Research shows that some degree of hands-on parenting can actually be beneficial for children, helping them emotionally and cognitively.
As a result, college-educated workers are taking on jobs that are cognitively less demanding (see chart), displacing less educated workers.
Researchers say their use of tools in this fashion suggests they were much more cognitively complex than some experts have thought.
The physical links between brain regions, collectively known as the "connectome," are part of what distinguish humans cognitively from other species.
Delirium strikes as many as half of hospitalized older patients, studies have shown; it's especially common among the cognitively impaired. Mrs.
Pile demands on our attention and that itself can cause falls, particularly among people who are already compromised physically or cognitively.
Though cognitively normal, many cannot feed themselves and require 220-hour care, wheelchairs and machines to help them breathe and cough.
The problem was that commanders of warships were being cognitively overwhelmed by all the new information thrown at them in battle.
At the time of the transfers, neurological tests showed, Mr. Mencarelli was too cognitively impaired to know what he was signing.
We were invited to this conference, which was organized by philosophers who are advocates for the cognitively disabled, as devil's advocates whose challenges to common views about the moral status of profoundly cognitively impaired human beings and the permissibility of ending the lives of some newborn infants with severe disabilities were strongly criticized, not least by Stubblefield herself.
Cikara, who studies intergroup conflict, worries that such a list "would make representations of immigrants as criminals more cognitively accessible," she says.
There's no guarantee that a radically cognitively-enhanced human will be safe, containable, or have goals and motivations compatible with human interests.
Dr. Geshe Lobsang Tenzin Negi developed a cognitively based compassion training program at Emory University that is based on Tibetan contemplative methods.
But more persistent, low-level pressure on a cognitively impaired person — preying on his or her emotions — might also be considered undue.
But she had little tau clogging her neurons and she has remained cognitively intact far longer than other members of her family.
Yet people today are cognitively tested only when symptoms have progressed to the point at which the disease is affecting daily life.
Today, students of color in the United States are nearly three times more likely than white children to be labelled cognitively impaired.
Most children become physiologically ready for toilet training around 18 months, but they may not be cognitively ready, according to the Academy.
There may be more birds and other animals out there that, although cognitively unimpressive, have societies as many-layered as our own.
Transcending this problem will be essential to securing even one link in a chain of cognitively sophisticated beings across time and space.
Yet there is definitive research showing that reading books that combine images and text is as cognitively challenging as text-only reading.
But what they found was that a significant factor among those who reported liking their job was how they cognitively reframed it.
But the science tells us – conclusively – the opposite: We're more productive, creative, make better decisions and perform better cognitively when we're well-rested.
But just because my daughter is cognitively impaired, it doesn't mean she doesn't have the same hormones as any other woman her age.
These researchers were reluctant to believe that fish, which are often viewed as cognitively vacant, could enter the esteemed ranks of such species.
The goal is to understand how humans, through poaching, "have altered the well-being of another highly social, cognitively advanced species," she said.
The psychologists warned beforehand that kids were not cognitively developed enough for video games, a new technology that many adults struggled to comprehend.
Now that we have the ability to make people cognitively serve sentences that stretch beyond a human's natural lifetime, we should use it.
However, it is the ability to reflect on their own thinking that drives the difference between them and numerous other cognitively advanced animals.
Even with the advent of super-processing programs, like IBM Watson, which are supposed to be cognitively naturalistic, the human spark is gone.
"Perhaps unsurprisingly, we found that when we gave THC to these rats, they basically became cognitively lazy," Mason Silveira, the study's lead author said.
" The Star Wars actress also told the Washington Post that while Reynolds was recovering, her mother's health had begun to "decline, physically and cognitively.
What's more, the very premise of the research is likely to stoke fears that DARPA is creating a race of cognitively enhanced super soldiers.
" He added: "It's worthwhile remembering that after being awake for 22 hours straight, you are as cognitively impaired as if you were legally drunk.
One month earlier, on Halloween, she had spent the evening on a campus in Vineland, N.J., that housed cognitively disabled women and their caretakers.
And despite a few news stories and nature documentaries, prairie dogs have not secured a seat in public consciousness as a cognitively interesting species.
While stereotypes of breeds are deeply rooted, Dr. Hare said, there is no evidence to show that one breed is cognitively superior to another.
The meta-analysis, published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, included 28 trials with more than 83,000 cognitively healthy people 40 and older.
According to the report, the woman never lost consciousness but was unable to cognitively function and was shaking on the left side of her body.
Consolation has been observed in animals like chimpanzees and elephants, but it was thought to require a cognitively advanced brain — which the small rodents lack.
Our city's brand is also built on progressiveness and forward-thinking; the council's recent vote was emotionally jarring for some, and cognitively dissonant to many.
Skimming has led, I believe, to a tendency to go to the sources that seem the simplest, most reduced, most familiar, and least cognitively challenging.
Together, these cognitively diverse teams will work together to accelerate past any metaphoric valley and build the iconic companies taking humanity to its fantastic future.
Of particular relevance here, those who are severely and permanently cognitively disabled are still entitled to equal moral concern, care and protection of the law.
A few studies in cognitively normal people and one in mice have shown a connection between chronic sleep disruption and the development of amyloid plaques.
The research found an association between obstructive sleep apnea and an accelerated increase of amyloid and tau deposits in both normal and cognitively impaired adults.
Spending the mental processing power needed to keep a story straight, he says, "essentially puts them at the edge of their ability to function cognitively."
Young people are digital natives, thought to be cognitively sharper, less distracted by family and less beholden to current industry paradigms, according to the study.
Egalitarians should agree about clear cases of blameless misfortune: the quadriplegic child, the cognitively impaired adult, the teen-ager born into poverty with junkie parents.
Further, these studies were mostly on those who were cognitively impaired; there's even less reason to think you'd see a difference in otherwise healthy people.
The first was under normal, "focused" conditions, while the second and third were made while being asked cognitively challenging questions and emotionally distressing questions, respectively.
The movie contains a classic trope in science fiction: animal uplift, the idea that animals could one day be cognitively enhanced and develop superior intelligence.
The ruling "is to protect the interests of class members by recognizing that class members receiving monetary awards are by definition cognitively impaired," she wrote.
Working one-on-one with seriously ill and/or cognitively impaired patients many hours each day over extended periods makes significant emotional demands on caregivers.
Her sister, Ada, takes a job with Phil's cognitively impaired father (who suspects his wife was murdered) and scams money from Phil's best friend, Ben.
"One of the things about being undernourished is that cognitively when you are that low weight you cannot think, your thinking becomes severely impaired," Galietta says.
Under many state laws, a person who is cognitively impaired due to the influence of drugs or alcohol is not able to consent to sexual activity.
Though they are cognitively and habitually primed to vote, they often lack a deeper knowledge — or interest, for that matter — in the foundations of civic engagement.
It's also important for the physician to talk to someone who knows the patient well, because people who are slipping cognitively do not always recognize it.
I don't think humans as a species are cognitively fit to really grasp the threat we're currently faced with; our brains simply aren't built for it.
It is why wheelchair users are sometimes presumed to be cognitively impaired even though the ability to walk has absolutely nothing to do with mental capacity.
And remember that you can prepare for cognitively demanding work sessions by listening to upbeat music just beforehand ,  a ritual we&aposve embraced wholeheartedly at JotForm.
The truth is, however, that had he not had an extensive cognitive evaluation, routine testing would have found him — and continues to find him — cognitively normal.
As you know, the reason the international ivory trade has been banned is to reduce elephant poaching and maintain the populations of these cognitively sophisticated animals.
Overall, the tone of the show is dark and dense, but in a cognitively dissonant fleet-footed way — another reason why the retrospective is so surprising.
"As the population ages, hospitals will be faced with the challenges of caring for an increasing number of frail, cognitively impaired older adults," White said by email.
When she emerges from her coma, Natalie does so in the same vein as most media representations: instantaneously and immediately able to perform well, physically and cognitively.
They also acknowledge that older teens may be more emotionally and cognitively mature than younger adolescents, which leaves them less susceptible to the risks associated with sexting.
Monkeys are considered ideal experimental models on account of their similarity to humans, both physically and cognitively, and because research on apes is progressively being phased out.
I understood cognitively that I was facing a crossroads in my evolution as a player and as a man, and that it came with exceptionally difficult choices.
Cognitively, it's a very different experience searching for, confirming and personally recording aspects of a patient's history than it is reviewing what's auto-populated into your note.
"Both medications had the unfortunate side effect of affecting me cognitively, in that my memory and ability to concentrate were negatively affected," she said in a statement.
My own research has shown that when people are cognitively depleted or physically tired, they feel more vulnerable and are more likely to engage in self-protection.
Finally, even if creatine may not be quite as useful at treating cognitively impaired patients as we may have thought, it still has uses in clinical settings.
As merely one of several mechanisms underlying conflict, I believe dehumanization is nonetheless fundamental to intergroup conflict because of how we cognitively process the self and others.
While it&aposs an emotion meant to keep you safe, sometimes it&aposs triggered by things that aren&apost threatening — and can impact you cognitively and physically.
Though state laws differ, a judge who rules that a person is cognitively impaired can appoint a guardian, sometimes a company, to oversee the person's well-being.
Andreas Nieder, the cognitive scientist from Germany, hypothesizes there are four psychological steps to understand zero, and each step is more cognitively complicated than the one before it.
The damaging effects of particulate matter on productivity may also be larger in more cognitively demanding professions—suggesting the benefits of reduced air pollution could be greater still.
It makes sense, and I had heard it said before (and believed it cognitively), but at that point in time I was finally completely ready to hear it.
Initially, Beuchel and her team expected both male and female brain sizes to increase because a male fish pursuing a female fish will be cognitively demanding for both.
Tai chi, yoga or high intensity intervals that make your heart rate soar are examples of cognitively challenging exercises that may overwhelm the brain at first, said Ratey.
While my son Ben can't speak and he can't walk, he is very mentally and cognitively able, and he certainly participates in decisions like that in our family.
In a politically polarized nation, where gun control is a divisive topic, even raising concerns about the safety of cognitively impaired gun owners and their families is controversial.
According to Bryant, there's no AI right now that can reliably do the cognitively complex job of an intelligence analyst, although that may one day be the case.
In this state, she is cognitively aware, but nearly all of her voluntary muscles, except for her eyes, are paralyzed, and she has lost the ability to speak.
He's also cognitively disabled after an accident, and he may not remember any details or, conversely, may not be able to continue to keep them secret if questioned.
This is definitely one you'll want to come back to when you're more cognitively able to receive its fascinating lessons on the forgotten history of entertainment's golden age.
The clear message is that the children of women with more support and better health habits do better cognitively, so it's important to support mothers of any age.
"It's how they develop emotionally, cognitively and in language — the statement comes out to help pediatricians and parents understand the importance and how to even do it better."
And though it's impossible to cognitively process each object—Orisha statuettes, a tiny R2D2, protest flyers featuring George W. Bush—Save Your Selves is mesmerizing as a whole.
"This is a major problem for individuals who are cognitively challenged: They have difficulty applying a skill or knowledge they get in one setting to somewhere else," explains McLaughlin.
She is a woman straddling two cognitively dissonant lives: one tethered to the here and now, one pure façade; one steeped in addiction and criminality, one in sexual fantasy.
Although it is possible that only people who are cognitively healthy would pursue such activities, those who read newspapers or magazines or played music did not show similar benefits.
In the case of someone like Ray, who's suffering from dementia, you'd likely be dealing with a very different interface than you would for someone who was cognitively unimpaired.
Many of the victims were physically or cognitively disabled, and others suffered from mental illness, leprosy - now a curable affliction known as Hansen's disease - or simply had behavioral problems.
Early founding teams are cognitively diverse individuals that can convince early investors that they can overcome the incredible odds of building a company that until now, shouldn't have existed.
The mode aligns cognitively with the image of thousands of women and men in their underpants, belching, farting, and scratching themselves as they slaughter digital representations of one another.
With children and the severely cognitively disabled, by contrast, beneficence prevails: We may impose a treatment on people who have a clearly expressed wish that we not do so.
"The more accounts, the more choices, and it's cognitively more difficult for human beings to deal with," said John Scott, director of retirement savings at The Pew Charitable Trusts.
It's also a reminder that inhumane treatment of pigs, which is unfortunately common due to their ubiquity as livestock, should be mitigated, as these animals are very cognitively advanced.
But when the drivers were asked cognitively challenging and emotionally stirring questions, they were able to maintain a straight course; while texting led them to veer out of their lane.
Many people given an M.C.I. diagnosis do not develop full-blown dementia even a decade later, and as many as 20 percent have later been deemed cognitively normal, he said.
The researchers, led by Dr. Yonas E. Geda, a psychiatrist and behavioral neurologist at Mayo, followed nearly 2,000 cognitively normal people 70 or older for an average of four years.
Two years ago, a study of Tennessee's prekindergarten program made headlines when researchers found that by the third grade, the state's preschoolers were no better off cognitively than their classmates.
As my other recent research shows, interacting with someone who is racially ambiguous in appearance is also more cognitively demanding than interacting with someone whose racial background is "clearly" known.
They're trying to figure out what kind of videos and sounds make people's hearts race, what makes their skin flush, and what makes them cognitively engaged, aroused, or maybe even... bored.
Cognitively, there has been a longstanding debate as to whether forgetting is due to (a) the decay of information in the memory stores or (b) interference from competing information at retrieval.
The administration will follow those steps "when a resident is cognitively impaired or clear in the mind and also if or when a resident insists on leaving the facility," she wrote.
Neuroscience and psychosocial evidence confirms that teens can make cognitively rational choices in "cool" situations — that is, when they have access to information, face little pressure, and possibly have adult guidance.
In a study published Tuesday in the Journal of Psychiatry and Neurosciene, they found that THC, the main psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, made the creatures less likely to try cognitively demanding tasks.
A child who was blind, deaf or cognitively impaired would often be roped out of regular classrooms and relegated to segregated programmes or state institutions where he or she would learn little.
These observations suggest that rhesus monkeys are self-aware, and that they're cognitively capable of passing the mirror test—but that something is preventing them from learning this skill on their own.
He is the one who has been reclassified as cognitively impaired, deprived of basic human rights, made to live without his keyboard and returned once more to the prison of meager expectations.
The further and further you move toward this smaller, socially and cognitively constrained group of people, no matter how individually bright or well-intentioned they are, the worse the decisions they make.
Looking at 10 years of data from nearly 900 participants who were at least 65 upon entering the study, the researchers first determined who was cognitively impaired, based on their cognitive assessments.
Biden's age, like that of the 77-year-old Bernie Sanders, undoubtedly would be a concern for some Americans, given the erratic and seemingly cognitively impaired septuagenarian currently in the White House.
Some of the drivers of this trend include more education, less exposure to toxins, and the fact that more people work in cognitively demanding jobs, Flynn said in a 2013 TED talk.
If we assume that he is profoundly cognitively impaired, we should concede that he cannot understand the normal significance of sexual relations between persons or the meaning and significance of sexual violation.
"Expecting that you're going to change the behaviors of the retailers with those sentences is just cognitively unrealistic with the way we fallible mortals process benefits and consequences and make decisions," Caulkins said.
"New drivers with ADHD should be encouraged to start practicing driving early and often under appropriate supervision so that the task becomes more routine and easier for them to navigate cognitively," she said.
But even 1 in 18 "cognitively intact" older adults is victim to financial scams, fraud or abuse in a given year, according to a recent study in the American Journal of Public Health.
She is cognitively impaired, disappearing sporadically and in patches like the cat in "Alice in Wonderland," only the more her brain deteriorates and the sleepier she gets, the mellower she seems to be.
THE ACCOUNTANT Ben Affleck stars in this thriller as a cognitively brilliant but obsessive small-town C.P.A. (he's on the autism spectrum) who secretly freelances for drug cartels, assassins and other evil types.
But there is now considerable scientific evidence about the long-term effects this practice can have on children — cognitively, behaviorally and emotionally — and we hope that the academy's position will receive wide support.
On the surface, every clear, concrete, and reliable element of a song vanishes, and all that's left for the ear to hear is the selected sounds that remain, and cognitively pursue their development.
Per the story: Within a few weeks, it was apparent that Edmund was not cognitively delayed in the manner previously believed; the staff had merely lacked the appropriate means of communicating with him.
Common coping strategies noted by male sex workers include dissociation (which involves cognitively separating yourself from an uncomfortable experience), focusing on the money, and seeking social support and advice from other sex workers.
"Continuing to be cognitively and physically active is paramount for overall brain health," noted Dr. Neelum T. Aggarwal of the Rush Alzheimer's Disease Center in Chicago, who wasn't involved in the review or guidelines.
Last month, Japan passed a law compensating the victims, many of whom were physically or cognitively disabled, while others suffered from mental illness, leprosy, now a curable disease, or simply grappled with behavioral problems.
Before we even get to this stage, however, this initial burden will likely fall upon animals, which opens the door to some potentially frightening and ethically-fraught scenarios, including cognitively enhanced, or uplifted, animals.
A study in Neurology looked at the relationship between sleep quality and levels of various proteins and inflammatory markers in the cerebrospinal fluid of 101 cognitively healthy adults with an average age of 63.
She found that 10% of women who showed Alzheimer's pathology on brain scans could now be identified; she also found that 10% of men who would have been considered cognitively deficient now ranked normal.
Reading is visually and cognitively complicated; it's OK to reread a line because it's confusing or, better yet, to linger on a phrase so beautiful that it makes you want to close your eyes.
I've had many discussions with my psychiatrist about the benefits of a combining medication, TMS, and talk therapy for developing healthy coping skills and understanding what makes me feel so cognitively different from most folks.
They are not cognitively able to set limits for themselves in appropriate ways and at the appropriate times so they need for us, their parents, to say, 'OK, this is where I'm drawing the line.
Even science, the (cognitively unnatural) mode of inquiry through which we try to suspend our assumptions and accept only what the data shows, is in practice shot through with culturally bound heuristics and value judgments.
Essentially, it means a device with the Fathom plugged into it can react cognitively or intelligently, based on the things it sees with its camera (via computer vision) or data it processes from another source.
Cognitively, he has the ability of a 13- to 3-month old, and his motor skills are on par with a 2-month-old's, according to an assessment by the New York City Education Department.
Peterson says that IQ is a single, irreducible heritable trait, and then argues that smart people have more cognitively difficult, higher-paying jobs, while people with IQs below 83 have no place in modern society.
Ms. Hincapié said that Mr. Montes, who is cognitively impaired because of a brain injury he suffered as a child, told agents that he had left his wallet, with his documents, in a friend's car.
They're also more likely to get an STD: 26% of cognitively impaired female high schoolers report having one, compared to 10% of their typical peers, according to a study published in the Journal of Adolescent Health.
Based on data from two large studies of older Americans, researchers found those who had problems with distance vision were also two to three times as likely as those with strong vision to be cognitively impaired.
According to the Department of Education, students of color are roughly twice as likely to be identified as having an emotional disorder as white children and nearly three times as likely to be labelled cognitively impaired.
For the current study, researchers focused instead on former players who appeared cognitively healthy to see if imaging scans might reveal differences in brain damage based on the position played or the length of their careers.
By observing the differences in these actions, they hope to understand what makes beatboxing distinct from speech cognitively — how the sounds a person intends to make are reflected in the way they shape their vocal tract.
"My sense is that the uncertainty of whether one is being observed will result in stress, which, over time, could erode mental health," Wells said, adding, "the need to be perpetually vigilant is cognitively taxing" as well.
Most of that research has come from the realm of neuroscience, as researchers unravel the complex interplay of neural networks that enables us to perceive the emotions of others, and to resonate with them emotionally and cognitively.
This work would suggest that, in fact, many cognitively intact older people also may be at risk of financial and other forms of fraud and abuse and really sheds new light on the scope of this problem.
" In his book by the same name, Newport writes, "Deep work is to focus without distraction on a cognitively demanding task, and shallow work describes activities that are more logistical in nature, that don't require intense concentration.
"The present study suggests that simple exercise is better than cognitively demanding exercise during working hours," lead author Keita Kamijo, an assistant professor on the faculty of sports sciences, Waseda University, Tokyo, told Reuters Health by email.
Families with two parents, which typically have a greater ability to spend time with children, emotionally and cognitively stimulating them from an early age, are most effective in building the necessary skills for a child's future success.
If educators are well-positioned to provide responsive and cognitively stimulating interactions to our youngest children, the children are much more likely to develop the skills they need to make a successful transition to kindergarten and beyond.
We need to understand that we are cognitively different from each other, not just by race, but other folks too, but by race as well, and that understanding that changes what we should do in social policy.
" Nearly 10 years ago, Weathers informs me, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) said that "compared with men, women become more cognitively impaired by alcohol and are more susceptible to alcohol-related organ damage.
By 2016, I was sleeping 18 to 20 hours a day, had lost feeling in my hands and feet, and was so cognitively impaired that I had trouble reading a dinner menu or speaking in complete sentences.
To counter Estlund's concern for fairness, Brennan asserts that the public's welfare is more important than anyone's hurt feelings; after all, he writes, few would consider it unfair to disqualify jurors who are morally or cognitively incompetent.
The results "support the notion of the role of cognitively demanding balance training for the maintenance of safe and efficient gait in older women with osteoporosis," said study coauthor David Conradsson of the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden.
One of the points he tries to hammer home is the negative impact of cognitive distraction: how our brain can't do two cognitively demanding tasks at the same time, and that includes talking on the phone while driving.
Researchers led by Yonas E. Geda, MD, MSc, of the Mayo Clinic Translational Neuroscience and Aging Program performed neurocognitive assessments every 15 months on 1,929 cognitively normal participants aged 70 and older over the course of four years.
Cognitively and emotionally, it is much easier to slot the pope into the category liberal — those who can be safely ignored — than it is to risk falling out of sync with the people and communities you care about.
"You have to start with some kind of paradigm that people can cognitively grasp," said J.P. Gownder, an analyst at the research and consulting firm Forrester, of why most VR stores so far have imitated brick and mortar.
Popular music, for example, may aid you in powering through a familiar, repetitive task — like your weekly date with your Google spreadsheets — but it tends to interfere with cognitively demanding tasks like reading comprehension and learning something new.
A separate 2017 study in the journal Neurology looked at the relationship between sleep quality and levels of various proteins and inflammatory markers in the cerebrospinal fluid of 101 cognitively healthy adults with an average age of 63.
Fraud can occur when a retiree's cognitive abilities slip, and roughly 1 in 18 "cognitively intact" older adults is victim to financial scams, fraud or abuse, according to a 2017 study in the American Journal of Public Health.
Importantly, the larger Neanderthal brain doesn't mean they were smarter than modern humans, nor does the slower growth rate indicated by the new skeleton mean that Neanderthal children were less cognitively developed than modern humans of the same age.
Beyond the rapid upsurge of anti-Muslim bigotry, the resultant public discourse has exposed disastrous double standards, revealing that subconsciously many people are on some level incapable of cognitively processing that terrorism comes in different forms, beyond Islamist terrorism.
On the assumption that he is profoundly cognitively impaired, therefore, it seems that if Stubblefield wronged or harmed him, it must have been in a way that he is incapable of understanding and that affected his experience only pleasurably.
"Our data also have implications for groups who are known for clinical under-hydration, such as laborers, soldiers, and the elderly, possibly due to their ignoring or cognitively mishandling important sensory cues that guide thirst and its quenching," the study says.
Ironically, implicit bias is most likely to affect behavior when people are "cognitively overloaded," taking in lots of information at once and having to make decisions in uncertain circumstances, which is exactly what happens at an oncology appointment, he said.
The notion that poor families deserve less help than they get because they are a cognitively disadvantaged group who will respond to assistance via overbreeding that undermines the quality of the national stock is not an unexplored suggestion in American history.
Luke's Medical Center in Chicago, also found that frequent participation in "cognitively stimulating activities" — everything from reading to working on crossword puzzles and playing cards to going to museums and attending classes — is associated with a reduced risk of Alzheimer's disease.
Whether he was cognitively impaired (as he seemed not to know the names or positions of some of his key witnesses, notably the former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski) or had simply misplaced his spine, he appeared to be lost.
"As the task of driving becomes more routine, it becomes less cognitively taxing and therefore ADHD symptoms would be likely to interfere less over time with experience," she wrote in an email, adding that practice can help improve driving abilities.
And since Computer vision (CV) algorithms are one of the backbones that enable AR/MR to have practical uses, making CV function more powerfully and cognitively in a small footprint and at low power has possibly never been as important.
Since higher levels of cognitive resources and partisan social identity are associated with higher levels of political activism, the effect may be self-reinforcing, wherein political elites polarize the strongly identified and cognitively reflective, who then elect more polarized elites.
As a chronobiologist, I know that now, in the year 2039, we currently possess the technology and techniques to carry out the punishments that these perpetrators deserve — not to physically experience these extraordinarily long sentences, but to do so cognitively.
In what researchers say is the first study of its kind, a study published Monday in the journal JAMA Neurology shows that excessive daytime sleepiness in cognitively normal elderly leads to a buildup of a plaque in the brain called amyloid.
Social robots also should carry a notice of potential side effects, the guidelines suggest, "such as interfering with the relationship dynamics between human partners," a feature that could inspire caregivers to protect those most cognitively vulnerable to a robot's charms.
Yesterday's speculation of whether we would get a "yes" on our pitch would have driven Past Me to call a psychic to learn what was coming up, despite cognitively understanding that I was buying BS and yet still craving that temporary mental certainty.
For instance, stroke belt residents who had  lived outside of the area until age 18 were 24% less likely to develop cognitive impairment, and those who lived out of the area up until age 30 were 30% less likely to suffer cognitively.
This makes some sense—a feeling of being cognitively sharper is a commonly reported effect of ketosis, the process by which the body burns ketone bodies, an alternative fuel produced by breaking down fat when glucose stores in the body are depleted.
In the UK courts' judgment, even though he is not imminently dying, Charlie Gard's quality of life will be so poor as a cognitively disabled person that it is better to withdraw his life support for the purpose of ending his life.
The Bigger Picture If you stretch your mind a bit, you can begin to see other practical applications of miniature, low-power, cognitively capable hardware like this: intelligent flight, security cameras with situational awareness, smaller autonomous vehicles, new levels of speech recognition.
"We broadly divided the activities into those that were cognitively stimulating, such as reading, and those that were physical, like riding a bicycle," said Dr. Joe Verghese, lead author of the study and Chief of Geriatrics at Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
Because blaming the individual is a default or fallback position, liberals have to go through a "more cognitively effortful" process to reach their less "natural" conclusion — "people have to basically override a more natural inclination to make dispositional attributions instead," according to Skitka.
It seems reasonable to assume that the experience was pleasurable to him; for even if he is cognitively impaired, he was capable of struggling to resist, and, for reasons we will note shortly, it is implausible to suppose that Stubblefield forcibly subdued him.
TOKYO (Reuters) - The stabbing deaths of 19 disabled people in their sleep last July and the silence surrounding their identities are forcing Japan to grapple with its attitudes toward physically and cognitively impaired persons, less than four years before Tokyo hosts the Paralympics.
Using data from the Harvard Aging Brain Study of 79 cognitively normal adults living in the community, Dr. Donovan and colleagues found a link between the participants' score on a three-question assessment for loneliness and the amount of amyloid in their brains.
"The message is that perhaps people don't fully appreciate that sleep is really important and does have health benefits beyond not feeling physically tired and being cognitively alert and so forth," said Relton, who is also director of the Bristol Population Health Science Institute.
And, finally, there's the internet barons who for too long ignored the weaponization of social media, which is turning our free press into a house of mirrors, where citizens can no longer cognitively discern fact from fiction and make informed judgments essential for democracy.
Exacerbating the transition problem, health professionals are beginning to understand that not only do former NFL players and military veterans have all of these societal challenges to contend with, but many must do so while cognitively impaired due to the repetitive head trauma they suffered.
Many social workers see maintenance therapy as the equivalent of taking street drugs — despite the overwhelming medical consensus and the fact that once patients are stabilized, they are not emotionally or cognitively impaired and can successfully parent, drive, and even work high-level jobs.
That's a fact many in Washington are reluctant to acknowledge, especially some cognitively dissonant members of Congress, who like to rail against fatty bureaucracy at the Department of Agriculture while behaving like any cut to the defense budget is a travesty against our soldiers.
Meanwhile, the cultural belief in "mommy brain" is so powerful that some studies have shown that pregnant women who walked into an experiment describing themselves as cognitively fuzzy were found in the lab to perform at a much higher level than what they reported.
It can feel cognitively dissonant, or even like a lie, to feel like (I say this from experience) an absolute whale compared to all the images of tan, lithe, toned celebrities, and be told that there is, supposedly, no difference between you and them.
It doesn't matter whether Trump is intentionally deceitful, cognitively impaired, or simply has never suffered consequences from his stated falsehoods and so doesn't care enough to bother with truth; an American president who cannot be taken at his word is a danger to the world.
The computers simply freed the humans from mind-numbing work like counting out 20-dollar bills to focus on more cognitively demanding tasks like "forging relationships with customers, solving problems and introducing them to new products like credit cards, loans and investments," he said.
"Expecting that you're going to change the behaviors of the [drug] retailers with those sentences is just cognitively unrealistic with the way we fallible mortals process benefits and consequences and make decisions," Jon Caulkins, a drug policy expert at Carnegie Mellon University, previously told me.
But Manny struggles to discriminate between things cognitively—such as the difference between putting trash in a landfill and burying the dead (both are forms of hiding, he points out)—and his blunt observations offer a reflection of the repressed way society views the human body.
The sheriff's office in Racine County, Wisconsin, reached out to investigate — and after an officer talked with one of the suspect's children, who recalled her mother's alleged years-long abuse of the cognitively impaired victim, they arrested 64-year-old Linda Sue LaRoche on suspicion of murder.
Whether you regard animal uplift as a science fiction fantasy, a bioethical concern, or an impending moral decision, the concept forces us to ask some interesting questions about the nature of intelligence, its promises and perils: What are the consequences of an animal becoming cognitively enhanced?
In a statement released to Japanese media after July's stabbing spree, police in Kanagawa prefecture, where the facility is located, said that they did not release the victims' names because it was a facility for cognitively disabled people and they needed to protect the families' privacy.
That self-deception is critical, since it lowers the cost of demonstrating our prosocial bona fides: we would be heavily cognitively taxed if we had to constantly pretend as if we cared about the environment when what we really care about is being perceived as an ethical consumer.
"We have to obviously to watch for all of these things very closely and have him checked out," says Mary, a stay-at-home mom who currently engages her son in up to seven forms of physical therapy a week, in order to help him advance physically and cognitively.
In the case of Betty, I felt that the clinic where I worked wasn't sufficiently concerned whether her mental disorder created delusions that often controlled her life, or meant she was so cognitively disabled that transition predictably left her more isolated and chronically stressed than before she started HRT.
A grassroots movement has recently emerged in which a number of scientists, philosophers, ethicists …Read more ReadMore conceptually, a growing number of scientists, bioethicists, and legal scholars have been making the case that highly sapient and cognitively complex animals should be awarded personhood status, which would afford them special protections.
Past research has shown that when older people perform cognitively demanding tasks, their brains become more active to handle the challenge, said lead study author Dr. Joe Verghese, director of the division of cognitive and motor aging at Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Montefiore Health System in New York.
Lastly, a fourth study examined MRI brain scans of 330 cognitively normal adults, with an average age of 79, and found eating foods that raise inflammation in the body -- such as sweets, processed foods and fried and fatty foods -- raised the risk for a shrinking "aging" brain and lower cognitive function.
Widely circulated cell phone videos of the incident left the city stunned, rousing hundreds of people to hit the streets in protest and spurring an independent review of the Toronto police's use of lethal force, with a special focus on interactions with people who might be mentally or emotionally disturbed, or cognitively impaired.
" She notes that only ten per cent of Americans who are at least eighty-five live in nursing homes, and that half of those in that cohort don't have caregivers; for the most part, she maintains, they are cognitively robust, sexually active, and "enjoy better mental health than the young or middle-aged.
When Seller was 4, his father went out on his motorcycle one Sunday night — "he was in a motorcycle gang, or a club, I'm not sure exactly, but guys who rode together" — and got in an accident that left him cognitively impaired, with a form of dementia that affected his short-term memory.
"With tau, the pattern was the same in African-Americans and whites—the higher your tau level, the more likely you were cognitively impaired—but the absolute amounts were consistently lower in African-Americans," lead author John C. Morris, neurologist and director of the ADRC at Washington University, said in a statement.
A.P.: To really read any discursive text, whether a philosophical tract or a legal contract, is a disturbing and cognitively disorienting experience, because it means allowing another person's thoughts to intrude into your own and rearrange your beliefs and assumptions — often not in ways to which you would consent if warned in advance.
Another cognitively dissonant brand-revelation capped off a wildly popular three-minute musical from 2017 (viewed 18.6 million times so far on YouTube) in which a chorus of men, women and children sing to a religious zealot in a suicide vest, telling him with righteous compassion that he has taken the wrong path.
The researchers point to other snippets of data that seem to support their conclusions: a study of Serbian women published in 2008, for instance, found that babies born to mothers with higher IQs had a better chance of surviving than those born to low-IQ women, which bolsters the idea that looking after human babies is indeed cognitively taxing.
Over hundreds of years, white Americans have oppressed black Americans — enslaved them, physically terrorized them, ripped their families apart, taken their wealth from them, denied their children decent educations, refused to let them buy homes in neighborhoods with good schools, locked them out of the most cognitively demanding and financially rewarding jobs, deprived them of the professional and social networks that power advancement.
So yeah, visual aspects are a crucial part of our work—by bombarding viewers with so much foreign stimuli they are forced to participate in the way they recognize and relate to these references and how they are linked to what they are listening to, while the footage they have no context for are cognitively filled in by their personal worldview.
Indeed, it seems to me that, conformably with the sage advice (not a herb or culinary flavour enhancer) given to James Hacker, by his principal private secretary, Bernard Woolley in "Yes, Prime Minister", only a cognitively challenged emulsified high-fat offal tube will do if we are to avoid the lanolin-encased naturally ovine fibres being pulled in front of our ocular enabling mechanisms.
In the United States, I imagine another factor may be influencing some elders' responses to stay-at-home directives: Although the overwhelming majority of older people are cognitively healthy, they are so often portrayed as universally mentally and physically feeble, and we have so little sympathy for people who are differently or not able-bodied, that many are driven to deny their chronological identity in self-defense.
"Physical activity reduced the risk of dependence in both basic activities of daily living (for example, dressing and getting across a room) as well as instrumental activities of daily living (for example, managing money or grocery shopping), which are considered to be more cognitively demanding," said lead author Dr. Pamela M. Rist from Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston.
The HEO concept — borne out of the now-concluded Tactical Assault Light Operator Suit or "Iron Man" suit that SOCOM spent the last five years developing — is elegant in its relative simplicity: Rather than focusing on physical advantages like body armor or load-bearing exoskeletons, the operator of the future will be cognitively enhanced, able to "think better and think faster," as Army Col.
One might assume that these creatures are considered fair game for consumption because of their low intelligence, but this theory doesn't hold up for long: Squid, which in the real world are cognitively sophisticated enough to use tools and commit acts of deception, are routinely caught, sold, and eaten in Animal Crossing; cows, pigs, and chickens routinely host gleeful barbecues where skewers of meat roast over the flames.
" In another key step, "the alternative measure is presented as one item in a block of questions exploring potential causes of female underrepresentation, thus cognitively masking its purpose" When asked the conventional question directly, Setzler found, "minority respondents are slightly less likely than whites to say that male political leaders are superior when responding, but they are 2019 points more likely than whites to exhibit pro-male bias on the masked measure.
When the researchers watched subjects in a reading setting — they were asked to read a short passage about the next president, pressing a button on a screen to reveal each word of the sentence — their bias was even more pronounced: The word "she," when referring to the future president, made people cognitively stumble, leading to a "considerable disruption" in reading time, said Titus von der Malsburg, another author of the study and a linguist at the University of Potsdam, in Germany.
"The explanation was that dishonest people subconsciously try to (1) dissociate themselves from the lie and therefore refrain from referring to themselves; (2) prefer concrete over abstract language when referring to others (using someone's name instead of "he" or "she"); (3) are likely to feel discomfort by lying and therefore express more negative feelings; and (4) require more mental resources to obscure the lie and therefore end up using less cognitively demanding language, which is characterized by a lower frequency of exclusive words and a higher frequency of motion verbs," the report reads.
Climate change is hard to think about not only because it's complex and politically contentious, not only because it's cognitively almost impossible to keep in mind the intricate relationships that tie together an oil well in Venezuela, Siberian permafrost, Saudi F-15s bombing a Yemeni wedding, subsidence along the Jersey Shore, albedo effect near Kangerlussuaq, the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, the polar vortex, shampoo, California cattle, the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, leukemia, plastic, paper, the Sixth Extinction, Zika, and the basic decisions we make every day, are forced to make every day, in a world we didn't choose but were thrown into.
It may be standard practice for big legal settlements, but the fact that many players are cognitively impaired and may struggle to understand the terms of the services offered to them has raised alarm among player advocates, legal ethicists and the lawyers for the players who sued the N.F.L. "I've been doing this litigation for a long time, there's always been a certain amount of stuff going on, but I've never seen anything like this by a multiple," said Christopher Seeger, a co-lead counsel for the players, who has received dozens of complaints from players and others about companies pitching sometimes dubious services.

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