Health and Healthcare

This brain training program could help to keep your mind active

Executive assistant Mario Rebellato, 68, works at his desk at Pimlico Plumbers in London July 29, 2010. Britain announced plans to scrap the fixed retirement age next year, saying it wanted to give people the chance to work beyond 65, but business leaders warned the move would create serious problems. Rebellato, who had been forced to leave a previous job when he turned 65, has been working at Pimlico Plumbers for the past 3 years. REUTERS/Suzanne Plunkett (BRITAIN - Tags: POLITICS SOCIETY) - LM1E67T16K201

Researchers are not yet certain what the underlying mechanism of the training is that decreases dementia risk. Image: REUTERS/Suzanne Plunkett

Marjorie Miller
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Health and Healthcare

Certain cognitive training via the computer may reduce the risk of dementia among older adults, researchers report.

Specifically, researchers found that computerized speed of processing training, or UFOV training, resulted in a decreased risk of dementia across the 10-year period, with a 29 percent lower risk as compared to a control group.

Speed of processing training is a well-established computer program that aims to improve the processing speed and visual attention of older adults through repeated practice of related tasks that increase in difficulty.

“Similar to our other work, we found that those who received more training also gained a greater protective benefit,” says coauthor Lesley Ross, associate professor of human development and family studies at Penn State.

Image: Gatesnotes

Training sessions

The study reports on the latest results from the Advanced Cognitive Training for Independent and Vital Elderly (ACTIVE) Study, which enrolled 2,802 healthy older adults at six sites around the United States and followed them for 10 years.

Participants were randomly placed into a control group or one of three intervention groups using different types of cognitive training: one receiving instruction on memory strategies, another receiving instruction on reasoning strategies, and a third group receiving the individualized, computerized speed of processing training.

Participants in the cognitive training groups were offered 10 initial sessions of training, each 60 to 75 minutes, which took place over the first six weeks of the study.

All participants were assessed on a number of cognitive and functional measures at the beginning of the study, after the first six weeks, and at one, two, three, five, and 10 years. Subsets of each intervention group also received four additional “booster” training sessions in months 11 and 35 of the study.

Researchers found no significant difference in risk of dementia for the strategy-based memory or reasoning training groups, as compared to the control group. However, as compared to the control group, the computerized speed training group showed significantly less risk with a 29 percent reduction in risk of dementia.

When reviewing the impact of each computerized speed training session completed, researchers found those who completed more sessions had lower risk of developing dementia.

Among those who completed the most sessions across all three intervention groups, the incident rate of dementia for the computerized speed training group was lowest at 5.9 percent, as compared to 9.7 percent and 10.1 percent for the memory and reasoning groups, respectively. The control group, which did not engage in any training, had a dementia incidence rate of 10.8 percent.

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Speedy attention

Participants in the computerized speed training group were trained on a highly-specific task designed to improve the speed and accuracy of visual attention, including both divided and selective attention exercises.

To perform the divided attention training task, participants identified a central object—such as a truck—while simultaneously locating a target in the periphery—the car. The speed of these objects became increasingly faster as participants mastered each set. In the more difficult training tasks, adding distracting objects made the task even more challenging, thus engaging selective attention.

Researchers note that the speed of processing training has previously been shown effective across more than 18 clinical trials in older adults on standard measures of cognitive abilities (speed of processing and attention), functional abilities (maintaining the ability to live independently, depressive symptoms, feelings of control, and health-related quality of life), and real-world activities (driving safety, balance, and gait).

“This is a promising evidence-based cognitive training program. This study, and others, demonstrate that there are differential transfer effects, meaning that one program results in certain types of improvements while another one does not. This highlights the importance of examining specific cognitive training programs separately so we can learn which ones have the most promise before trying to combine them with other interventions,” Ross says.

Researchers are not yet certain what the underlying mechanism of the training is that decreases dementia risk.

“We next need to discover what makes some computerized cognitive training effective, while other types are not,” Ross says.

“We also need to investigate the optimal timing and dose of training to reduce the risk of dementia and declines in real-world functioning. This ACTIVE study was conducted with a generally healthy sample, so it is important to emphasize these results speak to the delay or potential prevention of dementia and not its treatment. However, there are clearly steps people can take now to reduce their risk.”

The researchers report their findings in the journal Alzheimer’s & Dementia: Translational Research & Clinical Interventions.

Additional coauthors are from the University of South Florida, Indiana University, and Moderna Therapeutics. Grants from the National Institute of Nursing Research and the National Institute on Aging, the Indiana Alzheimer Disease Center, and the Cognitive and Aerobic Resilience for the Brain Trial supported the research.

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