Viewing Category: Scientific Validation
10/28/2009 - 3:42pm
Brain Training May Help The Blind-Sighted To See
Scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Brain Research have found that brain training may help people who are blind due to injury to the brain region responsible for vision, gain some vision.
Patients whose primary visual cortex has been damaged through a stroke or trauma cannot consciously see, but at some level their brains are still processing their visual environment. Through brain training, these patients may regain some conscious awareness of what their minds can see.
10/28/2009 - 3:15pm
Scientists Find How Brains Keep Track of Time
Keeping track of time and remembering things that happened in the past is one of the brain’s most important functions. A recent study has identified the neurons in primate brains that code time.
Neuroscientists have theorized that the brain “time stamps” events as they happen, allowing us to keep track of where we are and when past events occurred. Scientists were not able to find evidence that such time stamps existed. But a study at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has now found that missing evidence.
09/24/2009 - 11:52am
Chemotherapy Affects More Than Memory
Although chemotherapy saves the lives of millions of cancer patients each year, it takes a significant toll on the cognitive function and emotional lives of the survivors.
09/16/2009 - 11:41am
Sport Advantage- Players' Skill and Brains
We can all agree that professional sportsmen are better at their particular sport than you or I. Is it because of intense practice or are they simply born with better skills? Or is there perhaps something else at work there?
Swiss and British researchers have been looking into this matter and have come up with some interesting insights.
Any sport that involves moving objects (like tennis), requires three levels of response for timing:
09/09/2009 - 2:30pm
BBC Conducting Largest Ever Test of Brain Training
The BBC will be launching an experiment designed by Prof. Clive Ballard of Kings College, London and the director of research at the UK Alzheimer’s Society and Dr. Adrian Owen of the Medical Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit Cambridge, to test whether brain training actually works.
03/08/2009 - 4:14pm
Effective Brain Training
One of the most common questions people ask us is whether solving puzzles or playing computer games can help prevent or slow down cognitive decline. While any training is better than no training at all, research has proven that the key to an effective brain fitness program is its ability to maintain a sufficient level of challenge over a range of different activities.
03/08/2009 - 3:39pm
CogniFit Assessment
When people ask about what makes CogniFit brain fitness programs so different from others, I usually tell them that there are many answers to that question.
And that’s true. But it really all begins with the assessment we provide before you start your training.


