| Literature DB >> 26417460 |
Natalie T Y Leung1, Helena M K Tam2, Leung W Chu3, Timothy C Y Kwok4, Felix Chan5, Linda C W Lam6, Jean Woo4, Tatia M C Lee7.
Abstract
Increasing research has evidenced that our brain retains a capacity to change in response to experience until late adulthood. This implies that cognitive training can possibly ameliorate age-associated cognitive decline by inducing training-specific neural plastic changes at both neural and behavioral levels. This longitudinal study examined the behavioral effects of a systematic thirteen-week cognitive training program on attention and working memory of older adults who were at risk of cognitive decline. These older adults were randomly assigned to the Cognitive Training Group (n = 109) and the Active Control Group (n = 100). Findings clearly indicated that training induced improvement in auditory and visual-spatial attention and working memory. The training effect was specific to the experience provided because no significant difference in verbal and visual-spatial memory between the two groups was observed. This pattern of findings is consistent with the prediction and the principle of experience-dependent neuroplasticity. Findings of our study provided further support to the notion that the neural plastic potential continues until older age. The baseline cognitive status did not correlate with pre- versus posttraining changes to any cognitive variables studied, suggesting that the initial cognitive status may not limit the neuroplastic potential of the brain at an old age.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26417460 PMCID: PMC4568366 DOI: 10.1155/2015/535618
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neural Plast ISSN: 1687-5443 Impact factor: 3.599
Figure 1Flowchart of the longitudinal study of the thirteen-week cognitive training program.
Comparison between the Cognitive Training and Active Control Groups on their demographic characteristics, cognitive processing speed, and depression scores at baseline.
| Variables | Cognitive Training | Active Control | Test of group differences |
|---|---|---|---|
| M (SD) | M (SD) |
| |
| Age (years) | 70.1 (6.21) | 70.0 (6.60) | .953 |
| Years of education | 8.71 (3.84) | 9.49 (4.44) | .173 |
| Gender composition | 87 F : 22 M | 77 F : 23 M | .736 |
| TONI-III | 16.6 (5.34) | 17.7 (6.64) | .218 |
| MoCA | 23.6 (1.88) | 23.8 (1.97) | .494 |
| WAIS-III PSI | 71.0 (22.40) | 72.3 (22.74) | .677 |
| GDS | 4.61 (2.67) | 4.31 (2.41) | .403 |
Note: only the demographic characteristics of the Cognitive Training and Active Control Groups were listed here. TONI-III = Test of Nonverbal Intelligence (Third Edition) (total raw score); MoCA = Montreal Cognitive Assessment, Hong Kong version (Total Score); WAIS-III PSI = Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, Third Edition Processing Speed Index (cumulative raw scores of the Digit-Symbol Coding subtest and Symbol Search subtest); GDS = Geriatric Depression Scale; level of significance: P < .05.
Results from the 2 (Training Groups: Cognitive Training and Active Control) × 2 (Time: Pre- and Posttraining) Repeated Measures ANOVA.
| Cognitive domain | Raw scores | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cognitive Training ( | Active Control ( | Repeated-Measures ANOVA for Training Group-by-Time Interaction | ||||||||
| Baseline | After 13 weeks of training | Baseline | After 13 weeks of training | |||||||
| Mean | SD | Mean | SD | Mean | SD | Mean | SD |
|
| |
| Sustained attention | ||||||||||
| Digit Vigilance Test | 492.53 | 152.51 | 460.53 | 123.93 | 482.38 | 114.23 | 447.13 | 116.58 | .046 | .831 |
| Seashore Rhythm Test |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Working memory | ||||||||||
| Digit Span | ||||||||||
| Total |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Visual Spatial Span | ||||||||||
| Total |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Memory | ||||||||||
| WMS-III Logical Memory | ||||||||||
| Immediate recall | 26.21 | 10.43 | 30.31 | 10.68 | 27.14 | 9.64 | 32.26 | 10.88 | .933 | .335 |
| Delayed recall | 14.81 | 7.46 | 18.24 | 7.73 | 15.56 | 7.25 | 19.75 | 8.37 | .913 | .340 |
| WMS-III Family Pictures | ||||||||||
| Immediate recall | 27.39 | 10.96 | 29.20 | 10.57 | 27.18 | 11.24 | 29.19 | 11.60 | .027 | .869 |
| Delayed recall | 27.17 | 10.66 | 28.57 | 10.17 | 26.04 | 11.77 | 27.81 | 11.94 | .089 | .765 |
Level of significance: * P < .05.