Video: Brain cells and aging

Author Sue Halpern discovered that throughout our lives, we continue to produce new brain cells, and aging only slows this process.
In discussing the effects of aging on the brain, she also expands on the correlation between neurogenesis and exercise.

In 1985, with an Oxford doctorate, Sue Halpern went to work at Columbia University’s College of Physicians and Surgeons teaching case-based ethics and social medicine.

Nearly twenty years later, the author of Four Wings and a Prayer (now an award-winning documentary film ) and the New York Times notable book, Migrations to Solitude, returned to Columbia in the company of a young neurologist, Scott Small, who guided her into the world of cutting-edge neuroscience.

Halpern, a former Rhodes Scholar and Guggenheim Fellow, is a scholar-in-residence at Middlebury College and the director of the non-profit Face of Democracy project which teaches documentary journalism to high school students.

In addition to her three books of non-fiction, she is the author of two novels, The Book of Hard Things and Introducing Sasha Abramowitz.





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