Googling Fights Dementia, Study SuggestsGoogling Fights Dementia, Study Suggests Using search engines may help stave off dementia and memory loss, a new brain-scan study suggests. Scientists found that middle-aged and older adults with little Internet experience showed increased... In this article: Dementia, Google, Googling, University of California, Los Angeles, and Chicago |
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New Kerala | October 18, 2009
Surfing the net 'can help older adults slow dementia'
...: You can stop your ageing grandparents from becoming forgetful by simply asking them to surf the net, for a new study has found that Googling can consistently stimulate brain to slow or even reverse the age-related declines that can end in...
In this article: Dementia, University of California, Los Angeles, Googling, Chicago, and London
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San Francisco Chronicle | November 30, 2008
Internet searching stimulates brain, study says
...says Article:Internet searching stimulates brain, study says:/c/a/2008/11/29/MN5C147QAB.DTL Can Googling delay the onset of dementia? A new UCLA study, part of the growing research into the effects of technology on the brain, shows...
In this article: UCLA, Alzheimer's disease, Chocolate, Googling, Dementia, Ellison Medical Foundation, and Google
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health.google.com
Google Health - Dementia
Loss of brain function due to a series of small strokes (vascular dementia) ... Google Scholar More " Dementia praecox or the group of schizophrenias ...
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www.google.com
Dementia News - Add to your homepage
Most of the content in this directory was developed by Google users. Google makes no representations about its performance, quality, or content. ...
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www.google.org
Google Directory - Arts > Movies > Titles > D > Dementia 13
Viewing in Google PageRank order View in alphabetical order. Internet Movie Database: Dementia 13 - http://imdb.com/title/tt005698<wbr>3 ...
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early-onset-dementia.blogspot.com
Early Onset Dementia
Posted by Touched by Dementia at 3:07 PM. Relevant Videos from YouTube & Google: ... Google Dementia Search. Touched By Dementia Group: ...
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www.dementiaresources.com
Dementia and Alzheimer Resources - Daily News
... news headlines from the most popular dementia news on the web. ... Alzheimer's News Australia Google Dementia News. Topix Dementia Wire Alzheimer Daily News ...
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www.telegraph.co.uk
Searching Google 'can help delay dementia' - Telegraph
Searching the internet with Google can help slow and even reverse the onset of dementia, research has shown. ... Searching-Google-can-help<wbr>-delay-dementia.html ...
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video.google.com
Frontotemporal Dementia - Treatment (Murray Grossman)
Frontotemporal Dementia - Treatment (Murray Grossman) 26:27 - 3 years ago ... ©2009 Google - Blog - Help Center - Help for Publishers - Terms of Use - Privacy ...
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Description from Wikipedia:
The verb to google (also spelled to Google) refers to using the Google search engine to obtain information on the Web. A neologism arising from the popularity and dominance of the eponymous search engine, the American Dialect Society chose it as the "most useful word of 2002." It was officially added to the Oxford English Dictionary on June 15, 2006, and to the eleventh edition of the Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary in July 2006. The first recorded usage of google used as a verb was on July 8, 1998, by Larry Page himself, who wrote on a mailing list: "Have fun and keep googling!"
Fearing the genericizing and potential loss of its trademark, Google has discouraged use of the word as a verb, particularly when used as a synonym for general web searching. On February 23, 2003, the company sent a cease and desist letter to Paul McFedries, creator of Word Spy, a website that tracks neologisms. In an article in the Washington Post, Frank Ahrens discussed the letter he received from a Google lawyer that demonstrated "appropriate" and "inappropriate" ways to use the verb "google". It was reported that, in response to this concern, lexicographers for the Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary lowercased the actual entry for the word, google, while maintaining the capitalization of the search engine in their definition, "to use the Google search engine to seek online information" (a concern which did not deter the Oxford editors from preserving the history of both "cases"). In October 25, 2006, Google sent a plea to the public requesting that "you should please only use 'Google' when you’re actually referring to Google Inc. and our services."
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