Q: Do brain training memory apps for smartphones work as advertised? I’m looking to slow the memory loss that I feel I’ve been experiencing.
A: There’s some promising evidence that brain-training smartphone apps — with popular choices being Lumosity, BrainHQ, Elevate or Peak — may have a mild to moderate effect on improving memory and other types of thinking in older adults with age-related cognitive decline or those with mild cognitive impairment.
While brain-training apps may provide a boost, there’s no substantial evidence that they can prevent or slow cognitive decline. They also don’t seem to help people with cognitive decline that has progressed to dementia. There’s also considerable debate as to whether brain-training apps simply make you better at the brain-training exercises or tests, or whether the improved cognition extends into tasks of everyday life.
Potential benefits of brain-training apps require a fair amount of work. They must be used regularly and fairly intensively, and the effects fade quickly if you stop. In one study in which a brain-training app improved memory and thinking speed, study participants used the app for one hour a day, five days a week for eight to 10 weeks.
Brain-training apps have important positives, such as being portable and easy to use. Most have a variety of activities, and the difficulty level increases as you improve.
If you’re motivated to use brain-training apps — and don’t mind paying for them — they’re a reasonable way to try for a cognitive boost. However, you may prefer other forms of mental engagement and challenge — such as social activity, starting a new hobby or studying a foreign language — which may be just as effective in terms of maintaining mental sharpness.
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Interesting, are you using a specific program to learn a new language?
I'm not using anything regularly though I'm sure they're helpful. I had a few languages in college but not enough to become fluent. So am watching a lot of French TV and movies and trying to get my hearing comprehension up to speed. Or watch a movie in English with French subtitles...which is really helpful.
I like math but had way too few classes so have been working my way through calculus via a free online course.
Both Harvard and MIT have some really interesting free-or-cheap courses including one on the science of cooking. I find it fascinating as I don't have the patience to read the books on the subject.
Are any others taking online courses they want to recommend?
Thanks for sharing some of the ways that you learn new things. I use an online course program called Coursera. If you go to the Coursera website you will see that they offer free online classes as well as classes that offer certifications (there is a fee for those classes).
They have a variety of online classes that you can take without a fee. The classes provide interesting lectures by professionals working in the field, online reading, and quizzes to test your understanding. If you are home and need a bit of a challenge, these courses are interesting, well presented, and offer some added knowledge.
If you are interested, here is a link to a website that lists courses that are offered without a fee, https://www.classcentral.com/report/coursera-free-online-courses/
Learning a language gets a lot harder after age 70. I wish I had kept up with my Spanish throughout my adult life because I really need it now, as the volunteers at our rural health clinic in Central America speak no English and it is tough and very slow to reacquire the language.