Posted by Alumni from Nature
February 26, 2026
Adults whose brains still have strong neuron production seem to have better memory and cognitive function than do those in whom the ability wanes, finds a study published today in Nature1. The authors examined brain samples from deceased donors ranging from young adults to 'super agers' ' people older than 80 with exceptional memory. They found that young and old adults with healthy cognition generated neurons, a process called neurogenesis, at high levels for their age. The team estimated that the new neurons made up only a small fraction ' 0.01% ' of those in the hippocampus, a brain region that's essential for memory. By contrast, in people experiencing cognitive decline, including individuals with Alzheimer's disease, neurogenesis seems to falter: the researchers spotted fewer developing, or immature, neurons in those brain samples. Surprisingly, a group of 'super agers' had an even higher number of immature neurons than did other groups, and significantly more than did those... learn more