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Brain Health

Six pillars. One brain.

The lifestyle factors with the strongest, most replicated evidence for keeping your brain sharp, resilient, and protected from decline.

Meditating brain
The Science of a Sharper Brain

What 40 years of brain-health research actually tells us

Sleep, movement, nutrition, connection, learning, and stress mastery are the six lifestyle pillars with the most replicated evidence for protecting cognition across the lifespan.

The landmark FINGER trial (Finnish Geriatric Intervention Study to Prevent Cognitive Impairment and Disability), published in The Lancet in 2015, was the first large randomized controlled trial to show that a multi-domain lifestyle intervention - diet, exercise, cognitive training, and vascular risk monitoring - produced measurable improvements in cognition in at-risk older adults compared to a control group.

The 2024 Lancet Commission on dementia prevention identified 14 modifiable risk factors that together account for nearly half of dementia cases worldwide. The biggest contributors are hearing loss in midlife, less education in early life, high LDL cholesterol, smoking, social isolation, depression, and physical inactivity - every one of which is addressable.

Sleep is the single most under-rated lever. During slow-wave sleep, the glymphatic system clears beta-amyloid and tau - the same proteins implicated in Alzheimer's disease - at roughly twice the daytime rate, according to research from the University of Rochester Medical Center (Nedergaard lab, Science 2013). Chronic sleep restriction below 6 hours is associated with measurable next-day cognitive decline equivalent to mild intoxication.

Aerobic exercise is the most reliably brain-protective behavior we have studied. Mayo Clinic and Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health both cite ≥150 minutes/week of moderate cardiovascular activity as the threshold associated with reduced dementia risk and increased hippocampal volume - the brain region most central to memory formation.

Key research findings

Frequently asked questions

Can brain games actually prevent dementia?+

Cognitive training shows clear benefit for the trained tasks and modest transfer to similar tasks. The ACTIVE trial (NIH, 10-year follow-up, JAGS 2014) is the strongest single piece of evidence that structured cognitive training reduces real-world functional decline. Games alone are not a substitute for sleep, exercise, and social connection.

How much sleep does an adult brain actually need?+

The American Academy of Sleep Medicine and CDC recommend 7–9 hours per night for adults. Both shorter and longer durations are associated with increased cognitive decline risk in epidemiologic studies.

Are nootropics or supplements worth it?+

For people with normal nutritional status, most over-the-counter 'brain supplements' lack high-quality evidence. A 2019 review by AARP and the Global Council on Brain Health concluded the evidence does not support routine use. Always discuss with a clinician.

Is loneliness really a brain-health risk?+

Yes. The U.S. Surgeon General's 2023 advisory cites loneliness as comparable to smoking 15 cigarettes a day in mortality risk, and it is independently associated with a ~50% increase in dementia risk.

Educational content only. Talk to your physician before making major changes to diet, exercise, or medication.