Trouble with fixing objects starts during 50


Forgetting someone’s name is common as one gets older, though a new investigate from Belgium suggests that even a names of common objects don’t come to us as quick after age 50.

In a study, people ages 25 to 90 were asked to name objects that were shown in pictures. The researchers tested how prolonged it took people to respond, and either or not they identified a images in a cinema correctly.

People in their 50s were not means to name a objects as quick as those in their 20s and 30s (the comparison organisation took about half a second longer). The good news is that when a 50-year-olds did eventually brand a objects, they identified them only as accurately as younger people. [See 8 Tips for Healthy Aging].

However, people in their 60s and 70s were both slower to name a objects and some-more expected to yield a wrong name.

“We don’t nonetheless know because this happens — it might prove changes in our language abilities only or it might be caused by earthy factors that have zero to do with language,” pronounced investigate researcher Clémence Verhaegen of a University of Liège in Belgium. “More studies are indispensable to exhibit what is unequivocally going on.”

The investigate was published Jan. 2 in a Journal of a International Neuropsychological Society.

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Source: Health Medicine Network