The centrality of the first 1000 days—from conception to 2 years of age—for early childhood development is recognised in global research, policy, and practice as a crucial period for physical growth ...
Following the first 1000 days of life that span from conception to two years of age, the next 1000 days of a child's life from 2–5 years of age offer a window of opportunity to promote nurturing and ...
The Life in Media Survey will collect data from thousands of preteens over the next quarter century, measuring how using ...
Time catches all of us eventually. But what if I were to tell you that a new study suggests there’s a simple thing you can do every day that can improve brainpower and restore cognitive health, to the ...
As your baby starts to mature a more regular sleep pattern will naturally start to form. However, as ever in parenting, ...
Adults learn skills faster but forget more easily, while children retain skills better due to the benefits of sleep, ...
Roughly 1.77-million-year-old teeth show that slow development in hominids may have had an earlier start than previously ...
Could social bonds be the key to human big brains? A study of the fossil teeth of early Homo from Georgia dating back 1.77 million years reveals a prolonged childhood despite a small brain and an ...
Various studies globally and India’s National Education Policy reiterate that close to 85% of a child’s brain development ...
Compared to the great apes, humans have an exceptionally long childhood, during which parents, grandparents and other adults contribute to their physical and cognitive development. This is a key ...
Researchers find that people anticipate movement in visual stimuli, among other new findings of our visuospatial abilities.