
Cognitive Health and Resilience
Resilience and Healthy Aging Symposium
University of California Audio Podcasts (Audio) · UCTV: UC San Diego
October 18, 202544m 16s
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Show Notes
Cognitive resilience grows from small, consistent habits that keep the brain adaptable. Fadel Zeidan, Ph.D., frames mindfulness as mental training that improves attention, processing, and the way people relate to pain. Erin E. Sundermann, Ph.D., underscores modifiable pathways to healthier aging, highlighting movement, social connection, hearing support, and lifelong learning as mutually reinforcing drivers of brain health. Raenne C. Moore, Ph.D., centers practical strategies that translate into daily life, including routines, planned breaks, reducing distractions, and attending to anxiety or depression. Carolyn Dunmore, an older adult community Mmmber, exemplifies resilience through steady activity, purposeful community roles, faith, self-compassion, and the “use it or lose it” mindset. Together, Zeidan, Sundermann, Moore, and Dunmore point to a clear theme: everyday practices accumulate to support memory, attention, and well-being as people age. Series: "Stein Institute for Research on Aging" [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 40962]
Topics
cognitive resilienceAlzheimer’s disease riskdementia preventionphysical activity and brain healthsocial engagementhearing loss and dementialifelong learningmindfulness meditationpain and cognitionprocessing speedattention and memory