Kevin Cordle

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The ability to learn new things quickly reaches a peak in adolescence and the college years and declines after age forty. Fluid intelligence, the ability to use what we already know, is lower before the age of forty and picks up in each decade thereafter. Although our raw neural processing speed and reaction times may slow down (precipitously in our eighties), older adults have experienced so much more than twenty-year-olds that they have a competitive edge.
Successful Aging: A Neuroscientist Explores the Power and Potential of Our Lives
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