• Newsletters
  • Gift Membership
Logo Logo
Take Scroll With You Download the app to read our award-winning journalism on the go and stay up-to-date with our notifications.
Get the app Get the app
ANDROID iOS
  • Home
  • Common Ground
  • The India Fix
  • Eco India
  • The Latest
  • The Reel
  • Magazine
  • Video
  • Trending
    • How not to save a forest: Lessons for Hyderabad from Chennai’s Guindy national park
    • Air India plane with 242 on board crashes near Ahmedabad airport
    • When US media feared ‘another Cuba’ in the Himalayas and Indian Ocean
    • Interview: Now ‘everyone is afraid’ of speaking about the Great Nicobar project, says ornithologist
    • Election conduct rules amended at lightning speed despite objection by law officers, documents show
    • Reading Frederick Forsyth, whose thrillers that we grew up with predicted the future uncannily
    • A new self-help book shows how Stoic philosophy can be the key to navigating our modern world
    • Readers’ comments: Rejig Mumbai’s train timetables, Aqua Line metro cost too much
    • Romance: Aanya is ready for a fresh start in India, and she is captivated by a handsome young man
    • Delhi University will not teach Manusmriti, says VC after text included in Sanskrit course
    • In a new book, a nutritionist explains why simply adding protein to the diet won’t make it ‘healthy’
    • Why the National Testing Agency continues to fail students in India
  • Sections
    • Politics
    • Culture
    • India
    • World
    • Film and TV
    • Music
    • Books and Ideas
    • Business and Economy
    • Science and Technology
    • In Pictures
    • Announcements
    • Bookshop
    • The Field
    • Pulse
    • Elections 2024

Cognitive Decline

  • Our memories aren’t as reliable as we think, but how much forgetfulness is normal?

    Our memories aren’t as reliable as we think, but how much forgetfulness is normal?

    Alexander Easton, The Conversation
    · Feb 16, 2024 · 10:00 pm
  • New drugs for Alzheimer’s have been hailed as a breakthrough – but their shortcomings are profound

    New drugs for Alzheimer’s have been hailed as a breakthrough – but their shortcomings are profound

    Sebastian Walsh, The Conversation
    · Sep 06, 2023 · 10:00 pm