If neuroscience was born with the book "Anatomy of the Brain" by Thomas Willis, professor of natural philosophy at the University of Oxford in the seventeenth century, the opening of the secrets of our thoughts and emotions could not be studied except with MRI and CT.

The French newspaper Le Figaro said the emergence of photography enabled neuroscience researchers to visualize the activity of different parts of the brain while working, and to begin decoding links, despite the valuable illustrations presented by Willis's book.

New methods have shown that teenagers have a more advanced frontal cortex than adults, causing severe feelings about social consciousness, the way teens think people think they are.

At this stage in age (15 years), the peak activity of the frontal cortex (the frontal cortex) is reached, which explains the interest that those at this age have in their counterparts' comments.

The emotion of mind easily prevails in teenagers, because the maturation of the frontal cortex of the brain - which is only 25 years old - is not complete, especially since this part is the most advanced brain and is responsible for planning problems.

Teenagers have more active frontal cortex than those in adults (Deutsche Welle)

A stimulating life
In 2002, American researchers concluded, under experimental conditions, how older memories such as the memory of young people could be simply stimulated by older adults, and that the general mobilization of cells Nervousness through a life filled with excitement.

Indeed, researchers at the University of Texas have shown that brains that work better for those between the ages of 50 and 89 are brains that are busy and charged more.

If continuing to read, learn new activities, play different games, and maintain good family and social relationships, does not prevent Alzheimer's disease, the challenge of our brains on a daily basis delays it greatly.

The brain's strength lies in the connections inside it. Indeed, as billions of nerve cells that link the brain regions change, the links between them from birth to death are constantly changing, but poorly used links become sand roads abandoned, and those that are maintained daily become Real fast ways.

But neurosurgeons Mark Levick and Sandrine Cabot warn of an important difference between maps on unchanging earth and a brain map that varies from individual to individual and also changes in time, with an adjustment every night.

Berkley Matthew Walker, a neuroscientist, explains that selective screening occurs when we sleep. The brain transmits important memories to store in our memories and eliminates unnecessary experiments, but it avoids sleeping pills and wines that hinder good night work because the brain does not sleep completely.