TEHRAN (ANA)- A study by North Carolina State University has found that younger adults feel and look older on days they experience high stress, particularly when they also perceive a lack of control over their lives.
TEHRAN (ANA)- Kirsty Ross, an Associate Professor and Senior Clinical Psychologist at Massey University has wrote in his research that as a clinical psychologist, he has often have clients say they are having trouble with thoughts "on a loop" in their head, which they find difficult to manage.
TEHRAN (ANA)- A new study by the University of Copenhagen reveals a key group of neurons responsible for controlling left-right movements, offering insights that could benefit Parkinson’s disease treatment.
TEHRAN (ANA)- Researchers at the National Institutes of Health have found overactivation in many brain regions, including the frontal and parietal lobes and the amygdala, in unmedicated children with anxiety disorders.
TEHRAN (ANA)- A new study carried out at Aston University has shown that children as young as four years old eat 79% more calories when they are bored, compared to when they are in a neutral mood.
TEHRAN (ANA)- Cognitive behavioral therapy effectively reduces anxiety symptoms and alters brain activity in children with anxiety disorders, offering insights for personalized treatment approaches, a new study by the National Institutes of Health found.
TEHRAN (ANA)- A new research by the Brown University reveals addiction has a genetic basis and is influenced by changes in brain gene expression, which can be altered by medications and lifestyle, providing new treatment possibilities.
TEHRAN (ANA)- Researchers at a knowledge-based company in Iran succeeded in designing and manufacturing a device for stimulating nerve cells in animals for research in the laboratory environments.
TEHRAN (ANA)- A recent study finds that people with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) have a higher risk of death from both natural and unnatural causes than those without OCD, highlighting the importance of improved prevention and intervention strategies.
TEHRAN (ANA)- Parents of young children with an excitable or exuberant temperament could adapt their parenting style to help moderate their child's potential development of Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), according to a new study co-authored by a University of Waterloo researcher.