Sharp Brains: Brain Fitness and Cognitive Health News

Neuroplasticity, Brain Fitness and Cognitive Health News

Smart Brains, Sharp Brain… new research on maintaining one

There has been a lot of recent buzz about brain fit­ness. A New York Times edi­to­r­ial printed today states:

When tested five years later, these par­tic­i­pants [in a cog­ni­tive train­ing study] had less of a decline in the skill they were trained in than did a con­trol group that received no cog­ni­tive train­ing. The pay­off from men­tal exer­cise seemed far greater than we are accus­tomed to get­ting for phys­i­cal exer­cise — as if 10 work­outs at the gym were enough to keep you fit five years later.

and

If fur­ther stud­ies show that men­tal exer­cises can improve every­day func­tion­ing, doc­tors may need to pre­scribe such train­ing, senior cen­ters may want to set up “brain gyms,” and aging Amer­i­cans would be wise to do brain-stretching activ­i­ties. For this pur­pose, even the Medicare pre­scrip­tion drug pro­gram, which crit­ics deem too con­fus­ing for many older peo­ple to nav­i­gate, could prove an unex­pected bless­ing. Spend 10 hours mas­ter­ing its intri­ca­cies today and you could be a lot sharper than your com­pa­tri­ots five years from now.


To read the com­plete, orig­i­nal study pub­lished in JAMA, read The Ben­e­fits of Brain Exercises/Brain Fit­ness.

IHRSA, the Inter­na­tional Health, Rac­quet & Sports­club Asso­ci­a­tion, printed this arti­cle on men­tal mus­cles with sug­ges­tions on how to add brain work­outs to your tra­di­tional phys­i­cal work­outs. Essen­tially, humans need both phys­i­cal and men­tal exer­cise for good brain health.

Sci­en­tific Amer­i­can also wrote an arti­cle on Brain Gain: Men­tal Exer­cise Makes Elderly Minds More Fit. One of the study co-authors is quoted as saying

To drive this effect, you have to prac­tice things that you don’t like or things you don’t reg­u­larly prac­tice,” Mar­siske says. “We hope to find ways of mak­ing these train­ing pro­grams more widely avail­able to peo­ple and begin to encour­age some­thing more like men­tal exercise.”

As we have men­tioned before when talk­ing about key ingre­di­ents for a brain fit­ness pro­gram, you need: nov­elty, vari­ety, and stretch­ing prac­tice (increas­ing chal­lenge over time). Com­put­er­ized pro­grams do the best job of reli­ably meet­ing these cri­te­ria, but doing any­thing is bet­ter than doing nothing!

If you are still uncer­tain as to what is Brain Fit­ness, then feel free to down­load a com­pli­men­tary copy of our newly released Brain Fit­ness for Sharp Brains: Your New New Year Res­o­lu­tion. We wrote this guide as a plain Eng­lish intro­duc­tion to the con­cept, sci­ence, and prac­tice of brain fit­ness by answer­ing 25 ques­tions we have received over the last four months.

Print This Article Print This Article Email This Post Email This Post

Categories: Cognitive Neuroscience, Health & Wellness

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

6 Responses

  1. […] You can learn more by check­ing our longer post yes­ter­day, New Research on How to Main­tain a Sharp Brain, where we com­mented on yesterday’s NYT Edi­to­r­ial, the results from the JAMA study and an IHRSA newslet­ter to fit­ness and health clubs that we authored. […]

  2. […] Car­o­line Latham presents Smart Brains: New Research on How to Main­tain a Sharp Brain posted at Sharp­Brains: Your Win­dow into the Brain Fit­ness Rev­o­lu­tion, say­ing, “More and more research is being pub­lished on the ben­e­fits of brain exer­cise (cog­ni­tive train­ing) for both short term improve­ment and long term prevention.” […]

  3. […] We are excited about all the media atten­tion about brain exer­cise these days. Not only have there been some great med­ical and sci­en­tific arti­cles (read “Smart Brains: New Research on How to Main­tain a Sharp Brain” for links to those), but there are well writ­ten arti­cles in the main­stream press as well. Joanna Pon­cav­age of The Morn­ing Call wrote “Get Some Brain Train­ing”. ”Learn­ing and tar­geted men­tal exer­cise pro­motes neu­ro­ge­n­e­sis — the cre­ation of new neu­rons — just as mus­cle growth is pro­moted through phys­i­cal exer­cise,” says Elkhonon Gold­berg, clin­i­cal pro­fes­sor of neu­rol­ogy at New York Uni­ver­sity School of Med­i­cine, and chief sci­en­tific adviser. […]

  4. […] Fur­ther Read­ing Glos­sary of Terms The Muta­ble Brain Smart Brains: New Research on How to Main­tain a Sharp Brain Arti­cles on Brain Fit­ness Tags: No Tags […]

  5. […] Fur­ther Read­ing Glos­sary of Terms The Muta­ble Brain Smart Brains: New Research on How to Main­tain a Sharp Brain Arti­cles on Brain Fit­ness Rec­om­mended Brain Fit­ness Programs […]

  6. bala says:

    it is a very good arti­cle –thanks

Welcome to SharpBrains!

As seen in The New York Times, The Wall Street Jour­nal, CNN and more, Sharp­Brains is an inde­pen­dent mar­ket research and pub­lish­ing firm track­ing brain fit­ness and applied neu­ro­plas­tic­ity research and mar­ket­place. AARP recently named The Sharp­Brains Guide to Brain Fit­ness a Best Book on the subject.

UPCOMING ONLINE COURSE: How to Be Your Own Brain Fit­ness Coach in 2012 (March 2012).

NEWS: How to Sub­mit a Guest Post to SharpBrains.com.

Sponsored Ad

Top 30 Articles

  1. Top 50 Brain Teasers, by Sharp­Brains Team
  2. The Ten Habits of Highly Effec­tive Brains, by Alvaro Fernandez
  3. Why do You Turn Down the Radio When You’re Lost?, by Car­o­line Latham
  4. Brain Plas­tic­ity: How learn­ing changes your brain, by Pas­cale Michelon
  5. Top 10 Brain Fit­ness Future Trends, by Alvaro Fernandez
  6. 7 FAQs on Men­tal Exer­cise, by Alvaro Fernandez
  7. It is Not Only Cars That Deserve Good Main­te­nance: Brain Care 101, by Alvaro Fernandez
  8. Eval­u­a­tion Check­list for Brain Fit­ness prod­ucts and games, by Alvaro Fernandez
  9. MIT Event on Brain Games: Con­text, Trends, Ques­tions, by Alvaro Fernandez
  10. Stress Man­age­ment Work­shop for Inter­na­tional Women’s Day, by Alvaro Fernandez
  11. Mind­ful­ness and Med­i­ta­tion in Schools for Stress Man­age­ment, by Jill Sutie
  12. Stress and Neural Wreck­age: Part of the Brain Plas­tic­ity Puz­zle, by Gre­gory Kellet
  13. How can I improve my short term mem­ory?, by Car­o­line Latham
  14. Cog­ni­tive and Emo­tional Devel­op­ment Through Play, by David Elkind
  15. Judith Beck: Train Your Brain to Think Like a Thin Per­son, by Alvaro Fernandez
  16. Easy Steps to Improve Brain Health, by Car­o­line Latham
  17. Info­graphic: State of the Mar­ket 2009, by Paul Van Slembrouck
  18. Improve Mem­ory with Sleep, Prac­tice, and Test­ing, by Bill Klemm
  19. 10 Brain Tips To Teach and Learn, by Lau­rie Bartels
  20. Dr. Elkhonon Gold­berg on Cog­ni­tive Train­ing and Brain Fit­ness, by Alvaro Fernandez
  21. Max­i­mize the Cog­ni­tive Value of Your Men­tal Work­out, by Schlomo Breznitz
  22. Brain Fit­ness Pro­gram and Neu­ro­plas­tic­ity @ PBS, by Alvaro Fernandez
  23. Mind­ful­ness Med­i­ta­tion for Adults & Teens with ADHD, by David Rabiner
  24. Can Intel­li­gence Be Trained? Mar­tin Buschkuehl shows how, by Alvaro Fernandez
  25. How Strong is the Research Sup­port for Neu­ro­feed­back in Atten­tion Deficits?, by David Rabiner
  26. Exer­cis­ing the body is exer­cis­ing the mind, by Adrian Preda
  27. Brain Evo­lu­tion and Why it is Mean­ing­ful Today to Improve Our Brain Health, by Larry McCleary
  28. Phys­i­cal Exer­cise and Brain Health, by Pas­cale Michelon
  29. Posit Sci­ence, Nin­tendo Brain Age, and Brain Train­ing Top­ics, by Alvaro Fernandez
  30. Sleep, Tetris, Mem­ory and the Brain, by Shan­non Moffet

Sponsored Ads

Enter Your Email and Sub­scribe to our free Monthly eNewslet­ter:
Join more than 40,000 Sub­scribers and stay informed and engaged.

Sponsored Ad

Engage and Discuss via

twitter_logo_header

Monthly Blog Archives