Andrew Huberman· PhD
Deficits in working memory are also something that we see in people who have frontotemporal dementia, so damage to the frontal lobes or age-related cognitive decline
The headline is broadly defensible, but the qualifications matter. Effect sizes vary by population, the strongest claims rest on shorter trials, and credible voices push back on how it's typically framed.
Deficits in working memory are also something that we see in people who have frontotemporal dementia, so damage to the frontal lobes or age-related cognitive decline
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deficits in working memory are common in patients with Parkinson for obvious reasons those patients have deficits in dopamine neurons not only production but the number of dopamine neurons it's one of the Hallmark features of Parkinson's but also in things like traumatic brain injury etc
work from desposito lab and other Laboratories has shown that one of the Hallmark features of traumatic brain injury especially frontal lobe injury as well as certain neurod degenerative conditions like Parkinson's but other forms of dementia as well as ADHD involve deficits in working memory and attention