10-Question Checklist to Select the Right Brain Fitness Program for You
10-Question Checklist to Select the
Right Brain
Fitness
Program for You
By: Alvaro Fernandez
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Unless you have been living in a cave, you have read by now
multiplearticles about the brain training and brain exercise craze:
sudoku,
Nintendo BrainAge, multiple online games, software like MindFit and
Posit Science...
How do you know which of them can help you more, or whether you need
any of them? Well, that's why we are publishing the SharpBrains
Checklist below, to help you navigate through the overwhelming and
conflicting media reports and company announcements.
We have spent over 18 months interviewing scientists and reviewing
available Brain Fitness and Exercise Programs worldwide, and we are
going to share with you, right now, the research-based criteria we use
to evaluate them.
***** 10 Questions to Choose the Right Brain Fitness Program for You
(and a brief explanation of why each question is important)*****
* 1. Are there scientists, ideally neuropsychologists, and a scientific
advisory board behind the program?
(Neuropsychologists specialize in measuring and understanding human
cognition and brain structure and function.)
* 2. Are there published, peer-reviewed scientific papers in PubMed
written by those scientists? How many?
(PubMed is a service of the U.S. National Library of Medicine that
includes millions of citations science journals. If a scientist has not
published a paper that appears in that database, he or she cannot make
scientific claims.)
* 3. What are the specific benefits claimed for using this program?
(Some programs present the benefits in such a nebulous way that it is
impossible to tell if they will have any results or not.)
* 4. Does the program tell me what part of my brain or which cognitive
skill I am exercising, and is there an independent assessment to
measure my progress?
(The question is whether the improvement experienced in the program
will transfer into real life. For that to happen we need assessments
that are distinct from the exercises themselves.)
* 5. Is it a structured program with guidance on how many hours per
week and days per week to use it?
(Brain exercise is not a magic pill. You have to do the exercises in
order to benefit, so you need clarity on the effort required.)
* 6. Do the exercises vary and teach me something new?
(The only way to exercise important parts of our brain is by tackling
novel challenges.)
* 7. Does the program challenge and motivate me, or does it feel like
it would become easy once I learned it?
(Good brain exercise requires increasing levels of difficulty)
* 8. Does the program fit my personal goals?
(Each individual has different goals/ needs when it comes to brain
health. For example, some want to manage anxiety, others to improve
short-term memory...)
* 9. Does the program fit my lifestyle?
(Some brain exercise programs have great short-term results but are
very intense. Others may be better over time)
* 10. Am I ready and willing to do the program, or would it be too
stressful?
(Excess stress reduces, or may even inhibit, neurogenesis-the creation
of new neurons-. So, it is important to make sure not to do things that
stress us in unhealthy ways.)
We hope this information is useful. Now, go and exercise your brain!
Copyright (c) 2007 SharpBrains
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About The Author Alvaro Fernandez is the CEO
and Co-Founder of SharpBrains, which provides the latest science-based
information for Brain Health and Brain Fitness. Alvaro holds MA in
Education and MBA from Stanford University. He has been teaching the
class Exercising Our Brains at the San Francisco State University, and
will be teaching The Science of Brain Health at UC-Berkeley Lifelong
Learning Institute. Learn more at http://www.sharpbrains.com/hottopics.
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