Watched youtube dementia excellent. 30 plus yrs and now in my 60’s I identify with most of the points made relating to signs of dementia and am wondering if there is a similar video by Dr Nakamura on traumatic brain injury
Dr. Nakamura does not currently have a dedicated video on traumatic brain injury (TBI). While his channel primarily focuses on age-related cognitive decline, lifestyle factors, and lowering the risk of dementia, other clinical experts have produced comparable videos exploring how TBIs disrupt neural pathways and impact daily functions. [1]
Understanding the intersection of long-term head trauma and aging is a deeply important topic, especially if you have managed these effects for decades. [1]
Recommended Expert Videos on TBI & the Aging Brain
The Long-Term Neurobiology of Head Injuries: The video The Unseen Impact of TBI on the Brain explains how the brain attempts to compensate for early-life trauma and why structural or psychiatric changes can progress over two or more decades. [1]
Neuroplasticity and Functional Circuitry: For a scientific look at how head trauma breaks and reorganizes neural links, Expert Insights: How Do We Study Traumatic Brain Injuries? breaks down diffuse axonal injuries, circuit disruptions, and how neuroplasticity alters post-injury emotional and cognitive behavior. [1]
Practical Cognitive Compensation: The video Changes in Memory After Traumatic Brain Injury features clinical insights from healthcare professionals at the Texas TBI Model System, offering practical strategies to manage shifts in executive function and memory. [1]
Structural Differences: TBI vs. Dementia
While the overlapping symptoms can make you feel a strong sense of identification with dementia videos, the underlying mechanisms differ:
Traumatic Brain Injury: Primarily stems from physical “circuit breaks” (axonal shearing) and localized tissue damage. The brain uses its redundancy and neuroplasticity to reroute signals around these static injuries. [1]
Progressive Dementia: Caused by active, ongoing cellular changes—such as abnormal protein accumulations—that progressively spread across various cognitive centers. [1]
Many of Dr. Nakamura’s recommended lifestyle modifications—such as metabolic tracking, targeted vascular health, and structured mental engagement—are equally vital for reinforcing a resilient, post-TBI brain as you navigate your 60s. [1, 2]
Are there specific long-term post-TBI challenges you are experiencing right now (like focus, fatigue, or memory shifts)? Sharing this can help me find more targeted neurological resources or professional guides for managing them.
This is for informational purposes only. For medical advice or diagnosis, consult a professional. AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more
Something may already be changing in someone you love — and it may not look like memory loss at all. In this powerful conversation, Dr. Hiroshi Nakamura explains the subtle early signs of dementia that families often overlook for years. From personality shifts and emotional withdrawal to poor judgment, language struggles, sleep disturbances, and changes in behavior, this video reveals what cognitive decline can actually look like before obvious memory problems begin. You’ll also learn about medical conditions that can mimic dementia — including vitamin B12 deficiency, thyroid disorders, depression, medication side effects, sleep apnea, and more — and why early evaluation can make an enormous difference. If someone you care about “just doesn’t seem like themselves anymore,” this video will help you understand what to watch for, how to respond compassionately, and why waiting can sometimes do more harm than good. 🧠 Topics covered in this video: • The 10 early warning signs of dementia • Why memory loss is not always the first symptom • Personality and behavior changes that matter • How judgment and decision-making begin to change • The connection between sleep, smell, movement, and brain health • Conditions that can look like dementia but are treatable • What families should do when they notice subtle changes • How to approach a loved one with dignity and care ⏱
Chapters 00:00 Introduction: The Signs Families Miss 01:50 The Biggest Misconceptions About Dementia 03:53 Early Sign #1 — Personality Changes 05:31 Early Sign #2 — Poor Judgment & Risky Decisions 06:32 Early Sign #3 — Trouble Planning Familiar Tasks 07:37 Early Sign #4 — Mood Changes, Anxiety & Depression 09:20 Early Sign #5 — Language & Conversation Difficulties 10:27 Early Sign #6 — Smell, Sleep & Movement Changes 11:26 Early Sign #7 — Getting Lost & Losing Sense of Time 12:04 Early Sign #8 — Repetition Without Awareness 12:55 Early Sign #9 — Hygiene & Home Neglect 13:41 Early Sign #10 — The “This Isn’t Like Them” Feeling 15:14 Treatable Conditions That Mimic Dementia 17:56 Eleanor’s Story: Why Early Evaluation Matters 19:54 How Families Should Respond Compassionately 21:17 Why Early Action Can Change Everything 22:16 Final Thoughts & Closing Message
How this was made
Made with AI
Sounds or visuals were altered or fully generated. Learn more
The idea that music can improve learning has been around for decades. The “Mozart Effect,” is the pop psychology myth, first hypothesized in a 1993 paper, that listening to classical music can help people retain and process new information.
As an educational psychologist who studies cognition and motivation, my research explores how students regulate their learning and attention amid digital distractions.
However, there is no single answer to whether music helps learners study or not.
How music can help or interfere with studying
Researchers generally agree that the relationship between music and learning is complex. The effects of music on studying and other cognitively demanding tasks appear to depend on the type of task performed, the kind of music and the students themselves.
Our mission is to share knowledge and inform decisions.
I wanted to better understand what lies behind conflicting research on why students listen to music and whether it makes it easier or harder for them to focus. In a study conducted over the past two years, I asked 163 college students about their music listening habits while reading textbooks, writing papers, solving math problems and studying for exams – and when they hit the pause button.
Using music as a reward at the end of a studying session is likely more effective than using it automatically when students sit down to focus. pchyburrs/Stock Photos/Getty Images
Not a one-kind-fits-all approach
One of my most important findings is that music helps students feel more engaged, motivated or comfortable when studying. But this response varies, depending on the music they choose, the type of task they are working on and confidence in their own attention spans.
Approximately 67% of the students I interviewed said they used music to improve their focus, while 75% said they used music to support their motivation.
“I use music as one of the biggest motivations to study, especially when it’s something I’m not interested in. I am good at recognizing that and using that to my advantage,” explained one 21-year-old student in her senior year studying psychology.
All the students I spoke with agreed that the kinds of tasks they were doing – and how difficult the project at hand was – influenced whether they decided to listen to music and the kind of music they picked.
Students also reported various reasons for avoiding music, including distracting lyrics.
“I found that if I listen to anything that I can sing to, I have a much harder time studying,” explained a 22-year-old female student majoring in music education.
In some cases, students said that even instrumental music didn’t help them focus better.
“Even if it’s instrumental, I feel the need to focus on the music rather than what I’m reading,” shared a 19-year-old male student majoring in secondary education.
Many said they listened to music to avoid boredom, improve their mood and generally make studying more enjoyable.
Music “helps me feel like I can just keep going and writing and writing,” said a 20-year-old female student majoring in psychology.
More confident students might listen to music
To find out how music listening influences students’ learning, I then surveyed 103 undergraduate students.
Around half of them reported listening to music while reading, and 68% said they listened to music while writing. Approximately 70% said they listened to music when solving math problems, and about 30% said they would always listen to music, regardless of the task.
Students also differed in their confidence in their ability to stay focused. Those beliefs influenced when they chose to use music and when they preferred to work in silence.
One 26-year-old male student, who was majoring in secondary education and geology, said he would study with music “if it was a subject that I felt more comfortable with or more familiar with. But something that is very challenging to me, I think I would omit music.”
I also found that students who were statistically more motivated and confident were likely to listen to music when studying for exams and to focus on reading.
Music is neither a guaranteed distraction nor a guaranteed study aid. Instead, learners can benefit from using it strategically, adjusting it based on the task and their own needs.
In the end, delaying gratification by using music as a reward is likely more effective than using it automatically. Rather than assuming music improves focus, students should think about when it helps them stay motivated and when it becomes another distraction competing for their attention.
If you’re going to listen to music while studying, consider choosing something less distracting for challenging tasks. The playlist that fires you up for routine tasks is likely to interfere with more demanding work.
For students struggling to start an assignment or stay engaged during a long study session, music may help make the work feel more manageable. However, once it starts to interfere with concentration, it may be time to switch to white noise, especially when studying in a distracting environment, like a busy library or a loud coffee shop.
Reading and writing both rely heavily on language processing. Songs with prominent lyrics may make it harder to focus on reading and writing. In my study, the students who were the best at setting up their study space chose instrumental music over lyrical music, often to drown out distracting background noise and improve their focus.
As one 20-year-old female student majoring in secondary education explained, “I would probably start without it, and then if I notice myself really struggling, put it on and see if it helps.”
Photo illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios. Photos: Getty Images
Axios’ Marc Caputo and Barak Ravid bring us this intel from inside the White House:
As President Trump tries to hammer out a peace deal with Iran, he has a dovish adviser in Vice President Vance perched on one figurative shoulder — and a hawkish Secretary of State Marco Rubio on the other.
Why it matters: The success of the talks — and therefore the health of global oil markets — greatly depends on how well Trump deploys each man to balance competing interests in Iran, Israel and Lebanon.
A top Trump adviser told us: “Think of Marco and JD as aspects of the president’s personality and policy. There’s a more pro-Israel aspect of it, and that’s Rubio. And there’s a more Israel-skeptic aspect. That’s JD.”
Zoom in: Vance and Rubio differed during internal deliberations about the landmark June 17 memorandum of understanding (MOU) between the U.S. and Iran.
Vance negotiated the deal with Trump envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner.The VP thought Trump should sign off to end the war, reopen the Strait of Hormuz and stabilize the economy ahead of the midterms, according to several U.S. sources.
Rubio, with CIA Director John Ratcliffe and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, was skeptical of the MOU and the chances it could lead to a comprehensive nuclear deal.
Between the lines: The negotiations are complex because they’re trilateral, involving Israel, Iran and Lebanon. They include three agreements:
The MOU signed on June 17 between Iran and the U.S.
A June 21 agreement Vance struck with Iran in Switzerland concerning Lebanon.
A peace framework, shepherded by Rubio, signed Friday by Israel and Lebanon.
Friction point: On Rubio’s track, the parties worked to block Iran from interfering in Lebanon. But Vance’s track gave the Iranians a say in the ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah, which the U.S. classifies as an Iran-backed terrorist group.
The two tracks collided.Hezbollah and its allies in Lebanon were furious, declared Rubio’s deal null and void, and demanded that the parties abide by the U.S.–Iran MOU negotiated by Vance.
Said another U.S. official, playing down the situation: “To the Iranians, the deals conflict. To us, they do not. It depends on how you interpret those clauses.”
The intrigue: U.S. officials say the result of the Iran negotiations could have domestic political implications — especially for the 2028 Republican presidential nomination.
One U.S. official said Rubio didn’t take the front seat in the Iran negotiations for a reason: “He is waiting to see if Vance self-destructs.
“But another senior U.S. official called that characterization “boneheaded and wrong. Both Marco and JD are executing the president’s will.
“White House principal deputy press secretary Anna Kelly said: “There is one camp — President Trump’s camp — and the entire administration is fully behind the president’s efforts to ensure Iran can never possess a nuclear weapon.”Share this story.
Smart people disagree on the AI job apocalypse, and even the prophets of white-collar doom—Dario Amodei and Sam Altman—have walked back their predictions.
Recommended Video
But the best explanation for why AI won’t kill off jobs across the economy comes, perhaps unexpectedly, from a Dutch software company that sells its products to law firms. It also explains why the entry-level market hiring struggle is painfully real.
Wolters Kluwer is a 190-year-old Dutch information services company that sells AI-powered software to law firms. In a piece published earlier this month, the company cited two economic concepts: the “lump of labor fallacy” and the Jevons Paradox.
The “lump of labor fallacy” was coined by English economist David Frederick Schloss in 1891, as he noted that many workers and employers believed there was a fixed amount of work to be done in an economy. You can see this everywhere over the past four years, even among AI kingpins such as Amodei and Altman, as they warned that if AI eliminates a category of tasks, the workers who performed those tasks would simply be displaced with nowhere to go.
Wolters Kluwer alluded to the fallacy by noting that AI is freeing up attorneys to spend more time on strategy, counseling, and judgment-driven work but isn’t resulting in smaller legal teams.
“Legal teams are increasingly looking for junior professionals who arrive AI-trained and ready to work alongside these tools,” it said. “They need people who can validate AI output, manage workflows, and apply their expertise to the outputs rather than the inputs.”
The Jevons Paradox is an even older bit of economic lingo. Coined in 1865 by the English economist William Stanley Jevons, it has been invoked regularly by Apollo Global Management chief economist Torsten Slok to argue that AI will create more jobs, not less. Amodei even referenced it himself in May while retreating from his own AI jobpocalypse claims.
This paradox applies when a resource becomes cheaper or more efficient to use and total consumption of it tends to rise, not fall. When steam engines became more fuel-efficient in the 19th century, coal consumption didn’t drop—it multiplied, because cheaper engines proliferated everywhere.
Applied to legal work, Wolters Kluwer said AI that cuts the cost of research and document review doesn’t reduce demand for legal services, but rather expands the universe of what clients expect law firms to deliver. Efficiency creates appetite, not surplus.
“Efficiency gains driven by AI are likely to increase expectations about the work you can produce rather than reduce demand,” the firm argued, calling AI a “task machine, not a job machine.”
Wolters Kluwer added that AI “excels at completing individual workflows but lacks the judgment required to perform an end-to-end job as a person would,” citing internal research findings that AI produced professional-quality output on individual tasks roughly 50% to 60% of the time across various roles. When tasked with executing a complete project end-to-end, though, the success rate drops to around 2%.
This perfectly fits the pattern of a labor market where the entry-level workers who do one task at a time struggle to get hired, and the rest of the AI jobpocalypse just doesn’t really show up in the data.
The question the webinar doesn’t ask
The entry-level job market is the worst it has been in 37 years. Entry-level positions across professional services have dropped 29% since January 2024. Finance and information services—the industries that have historically provided an on-ramp for most college graduates—shed an average of 9,000 jobs per month since 2023, compared to adding 44,000 per month before the pandemic. A Stanford study found workers ages 22 to 25 in highly AI-exposed occupations experienced a 13% drop in employment since 2022. Before walking it back, Amodei warned that AI could eliminate roughly half of all entry-level white-collar jobs within five years.
Gen Z is not struggling because of bad attitudes or unrealistic expectations. The first rung of the career ladder is structurally disappearing. And the Wolters Kluwer framework explains why—although it declines to say so.
Firms don’t need fewer senior lawyers—they need more of them, better-leveraged, handling more sophisticated work for more demanding clients. While Wolters Kluwer sees demand expanding, it doesn’t look closely at where in the value spectrum that is the case. Compounded across an industry over a decade, it describes a profession that has stopped training its own replacements.
PwC calls this “seniorization,” based on an analysis of more than 1 billion job postings. The Big Four firm’s 2026AI Global Jobs Barometer found that entry-level roles in highly AI-exposed occupations have become seven times as likely to require skills that have historically appeared later in a worker’s career. These are skills like strategic decision-making, stakeholder management, leadership, and judgment.
This is not a new pattern. It is the oldest pattern in economic history.
The medieval plow dramatically increased agricultural output across Europe. Peasants didn’t benefit—the surplus went to build cathedrals. The spinning jenny automated textile production and led to longer hours at lower wages for the workers it was supposed to liberate. The internet created more wealth than any technology in modern history and concentrated it among a small number of platform companies while generating, for most workers, gig roles, delivery routes, and content moderation queues.
The question has never been whether technology creates wealth. It is always about who captures this wealth, and under what political and institutional conditions it becomes broadly distributed.
Subscribe to Fortune Gulf Brief. Every Tuesday, this new newsletter delivers clear-eyed, authoritative intelligence on the deals, decisions, policies, and power shifts shaping one of the world’s most consequential regions, written for the people who need to act on it. Sign up here.