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Most Demanding Mental Challenges Keep Aging Mind Sharp

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  • Most Demanding Mental Challenges Keep Aging Mind Sharp

    Most Demanding Mental Challenges Keep Aging Mind Sharp

    By Rick Nauert PhD Senior News Editor
    Reviewed by John M. Grohol, Psy.D. on October 22, 2013

    Emerging studies suggest that only certain activities — learning a mentally demanding skill like photography, for instance — are likely to improve cognitive functioning in older adults.

    The new findings holds that that less demanding activities, such as listening to classical music or completing word puzzles, probably won’t bring noticeable benefits to an aging mind. That category of less effective tools also includes the popular brain games, such as Luminosity, that you see advertised on TV.

    “It seems it is not enough just to get out and do something — it is important to get out and do something that is unfamiliar and mentally challenging, and that provides broad stimulation mentally and socially,” said lead researcher Denise Park of the University of Texas at Dallas.

    “When you are inside your comfort zone you may be outside of the enhancement zone.”

    The new findings, to be published in the journal Psychological Science, provide much-needed insight into the components of everyday activities that contribute to cognitive vitality as we age.

    “We need, as a society, to learn how to maintain a healthy mind, just like we know how to maintain vascular health with diet and exercise,” said Park. “We know so little right now.”

    “This is speculation, but what if challenging mental activity slows the rate at which the brain ages? Every year that you save could be an added year of high-quality life and independence.”

    For their study, Park and colleagues randomly assigned 221 adults, ages 60 to 90, to engage in a particular type of activity for 15 hours a week over the course of three months.

    Some participants were assigned to learn a new skill — digital photography, quilting, or both — which required active engagement and tapped working memory, long-term memory and other high-level cognitive processes.

    Other participants were instructed to engage in more familiar activities at home, such as listening to classical music and completing word puzzles. And, to account for the possible influence of social contact, some participants were assigned to a social group that included social interactions, field trips, and entertainment.

    At the end of three months, Park and colleagues found that the adults who were productively engaged in learning new skills showed improvements in memory compared to those who engaged in social activities or non-demanding mental activities at home.

    “The findings suggest that engagement alone is not enough,” Park said.

    “The three learning groups were pushed very hard to keep learning more and mastering more tasks and skills. Only the groups that were confronted with continuous and prolonged mental challenge improved.”

    The study is particularly noteworthy given that the researchers were able to systematically intervene in people’s lives, putting them in new environments and providing them with skills and relationships.

    “Our participants essentially agreed to be assigned randomly to different lifestyles for three months so that we could compare how different social and learning environments affected the mind,” said Park.

    “People built relationships and learned new skills — we hope these are gifts that keep on giving, and continue to be a source of engagement and stimulation even after they finished the study.”

    The researchers will follow-up with the participants one year and five years down the road to see if the effects remain over the long term.

    Source: Association for Psychological Science

    Enjoyed reading this...as am thinking of tutoring GED students! Joan :redrose:

  • #2
    Re: Most Demanding Mental Challenges Keep Aging Mind Sharp

    Hey Joan,
    Very interesting. I seem to be the one that stays "within their comfort zone". Makes me wonder what other things I can do to stimulate my mind more. I know that I forget more and more things every year. It is scary for sure. Thanks. Hope you are doing well.

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