Archive for the 'Mind Fitness' Category

Mental Exercise Helps Maintain Thinking Skills

Thursday, December 21st, 2006

Here is a great new study that supports what we are doing at Happy Neuron.

Certain mental exercises can offset some of the expected decline in older adults’ thinking skills and show promise for maintaining cognitive abilities needed to do everyday tasks such as shopping, making meals and handling finances, according to a new study.

You can read the complete article here

Building the Mental Savings Account

Saturday, December 2nd, 2006

There is an article on Happyneuron.com over at KillerAPP.com.

“You can’t just practice the mental skills you’re good at, according to Happy Neuron. You need to practice a broad range of skills — memory, attention, language, executive functions (logic, problem solving, etc.) and spatial and visual skills. The site offers games in each category so that you can develop a balanced workout.”

Read the full piece here

INTERNET — Working out your brain

Friday, December 1st, 2006

Associated Press writer looks at brain work-outs on the web. Special attention is made to our www.happyneuron.com site and the article acknowledges the richness of our site compared to other online brain work-outs. It also states that mental calisthenics are good for you.

In other words, rigorous mental activity appears to be good for brain health, and, as a result, doctors are starting to reccomend mental calisthenics. But as with heart-disease or cancer prevention methods, nothing is foolproof.

You can read more here 

Cognitive enhancers as common as coffee

Tuesday, November 7th, 2006

The BBC reports on a study by UK organization Foresight that makes futuristic predictions in the brain health area. According to the report, scientists predict that healthy people, including children, might one day take drugs to boost their intelligence.

The Foresight report states: “In a world that is increasingly non-stop and competitive, the individual’s use of such substances may move from the fringe to the norm, with cognition enhancers used as coffee is today”.
But the availability of such drugs would open up a range of social and ethical questions, including whether it should be permitted for people to use them to gain advantage over others.

How they should be monitored would also be an issue.

Additional information on the report is also available on the Foresight web site as well as this related article from one of the study’s researchers based at the University of Bristol.

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