Aging Brains: Why Mental Age Differs From Chronological Age

Laura Sanders 2025-09-17 ​15:00:00

Amid the petty drama‌ of internet arguments, one never fails to entertain me: Do millennials actually look younger than their age? Sunscreen, vaping, hair parting ​choices and Botox for people who ⁣don’t have wrinkles are used ⁢as⁣ evidence for and against this generational Dorian Graying. I can’t and won’t adjudicate this debate. But I can shift‍ the conversation away from TikTok and inward⁣ to the brain.

Brain age isn’t a ‌new concept, especially for people trying to make money. For ⁣decades, people have sold books, apps, IV drips and supplements promising to keep brains spry, ofen wiht little or ​no scientific evidence.But lately, scientists have been building evidence that a metric​ called brain age holds promise​ for understanding how the healthy brain ages. Even more tantalizingly, they’re uncovering hints about⁤ what might affect that number.

first,a caveat: There’s no‌ single way to measure and calculate brain age. Scans of entire brains, measurements of gray matter thickness, the size‍ of some brain structures and many other measurements have all ⁢been used to calculate brain age, often with sophisticated machine learning analyses.

one attempt, published in Nature in 2022, examined scans of over ⁣100,000⁤ brains, from⁣ fetal to​ centenarian.Those were used to produce “essentially growth‌ charts, ⁤similar to height ‌and weight [curves] for‍ babies,” but instead with gray and‍ white matter changes in‍ the brain, says coauthor Katharine Dunlop, a cognitive‌ neuroscientist at‍ the‌ University of Toronto.

Those growth charts displayed the collective ways that brains change over time; they also hint at a relationship between diseases ​such as Alzheimer’s and advanced brain age,‌ which can result in a gap between someone’s brain ‍age and their chronological age. On average, some brain regions shrink as we⁣ age, and research suggests⁤ these changes⁤ come earlier with Alzheimer’s. Schizophrenia, depression and anxiety have also been linked to older-than-expected brain age.

“There’s a lot ⁤of unexplored territory here,” Dunlop says, including the details of how‍ premature brain aging happens. Genetics,early ⁣life ⁢events,stress,inflammation and other innumerable ⁣variables may all contribute; a single measurement can’t explain why a person’s brain is the way ⁣it is. “Our bodies are complex,” Dunlop ​notes. she thinks of a​ brain ⁢age measurement a bit like a thermometer. The simple tool produces a single metric — temperature — that⁤ marks illness. A thermometer can’t pinpoint a fever’s cause,‍ but the tool still comes in handy. The same concept holds true for brain age; a simple score could help identify who is at risk, and who might benefit from interventions early.

Those brain age interventions are not ⁣the puzzles and‍ tricks pushed online. Rather, our brains benefit from basic healthy habits, evidence suggests: Exercise, don’t smoke, eat a healthy diet and keep socially active.This stodgy but powerful advice is also reinforced by‌ a two-year study of people at risk ‍of dementia ‍published this summer in JAMA.

Neuroscientist Laura Han of⁤ Amsterdam UMC studies people with depression, a condition linked to⁣ a larger brain age gap. ​Han and her colleagues found that lifestyle​ factors may influence brain ‌age — for⁣ better and for worse — in people with depression. Smoking and a high body mass index were⁤ associated ​with an older-than-expected brain age, while education was associated with a more accurate brain age.These ​results were recently described in a preprint on bioRxiv.org. Han and her colleagues⁣ are now examining a structured running program’s ⁤effect on depression and brain age.

For now, ‌brain age is not a clinical tool‍ that doctors use regularly, though they may one day. don’t let this stress you out. No matter how you‌ part your hair, underneath it all, ‌your ⁣brain is a powerful, adaptable and mysterious wonder.

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