Follow this blog:
RSS

Q&A: New evidence shows brain-training games don’t work

By | May 28, 2012, 4:32 PM PDT

Train your brain.

The desire to improve our cognitive ability through brain-training games has turned into what is said to be a trillion-dollar industry. Such games are based on the idea that testing our memory, attention and other types of brain processing will improve our overall intelligence and brain function.

Companies like Lumosity, Cogmed and Nintendo are all cashing in hugely on this idea. But many scientists and experts in brain research feel the theory has serious flaws. There has yet to be concrete evidence proving anything close to what such companies claim to be able to do.

In fact, David Z. Hambrick, associate professor of psychology at Michigan State University, and his colleagues Thomas S. Redick (lead researcher) and Randall W. Engle will soon be publishing new evidence that fails to replicate the very study that so much of the commercial industry rests upon.

We spoke with Hambrick about the limits of intelligence and the findings from this new and potentially ground-breaking study.

SmartPlanet: What are these brain games actually training or improving?

David Z. Hambrick: The so-called brain games are essentially tasks that require the player to remember information, to attend to information and make judgments, and to comprehend texts or imagine how an object might look in different orientations.

SP: What would be one test used by one of these brain-game companies, like Lumosity?

DZH: One is called a dual n-back test. Users have to monitor two streams of information, one visual and one auditory. And each time one or both of these streams emits some kind of an established target you press a key. So it’s a divided-attention task: You have to split your attention between two channels of input.

SP: How is that supposed to be improving our intelligence?

DZH: Great question. It’s designed to improve working memory. You can think of working memory as your mental workspace for concurrently sorting and processing information. One of the core capabilities of working memory is the ability to control attention. Lumosity is marketing this test to increase intelligence because it is designed to tap into this ability to control attention. Their idea is that if we can improve the ability to control attention then we can, by extension, improve people’s intelligence.

SP: What was the trigger that launched this huge industry trend of brain games?

DZH: Psychologists have been interested in the idea of improving intelligence for over a century. But until the mid-2000s, people were not very optimistic about this whole enterprise.

However, there was a specific study published in 2008 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by Susanne Jaeggi and Martin Buschkuehl that renewed interest in this topic.

SP: Could you describe that study?

DZH: Sure. They had subjects complete a test to measure reasoning ability. Subjects watched patterns that change across rows or down columns, and made an inference about how those patterns change. Then some of the subjects received the dual n-back training. One group received eight sessions of training, another group received 12 sessions of training, a third group 17 sessions, and a fourth group 19 sessions of training.

Some of the subjects were assigned to a control group, meaning they didn’t receive any training after taking the reasoning test. Then everybody returned for a second administration of the test.

They found that the training subjects showed a bigger gain in reasoning test scores than the control subjects. And they also found that the training groups that received more hours of training showed a bigger gain in reasoning test scores.

They explicitly claimed that this was an increase in intelligence, and not merely in performance on a single test of reasoning. In particular an increase in what we call fluid intelligence.

SP: What is fluid intelligence?

DZH: Fluid intelligence is the ability to solve novel problems and adapt to new situations, as opposed to crystallized intelligence, which is acculturated learning, so for example knowing the meaning of the word “concur”, or knowing what the Koran is.

It has been thought that fluid intelligence is pretty much fixed, and that it is impervious to efforts to improve it through training. So the finding in the Jaeggi study that fluid intelligence can be improved created a big stir.

SP: But you claim the study has major flaws?

DZH: If you find that people get better in one test of reasoning it doesn’t mean necessarily that they’re smart, it means that they’re better on one test of reasoning. You can’t measure fluid intelligence with any single test, it’s measured with multiple tests.

SP: And the other flaw?

DZH: There were some pretty striking differences between the control group and the training groups. The control group who received no training, went home and did whatever. But the training groups, on the other hand, came in regularly for training. This raises possibility of motivation being an explanation: They wanted to do well in the experiment.

Another important point is that there were procedural differences across these training groups that really complicate interpretation of the results, and in particular the claim that more training equals more gain. These procedural differences were not reported in the Jaeggi article. We found out about them in Jaeggi’s unpublished dissertation, and through follow-up emails to Jaeggi.

SP: You worked with lead researcher Tom Redick to attempt to replicate the findings from the Jaeggi study. And this research is about to be published. Can you give us a preview of what you found?

DZH: So, we set out to replicate the findings, correcting all of these problems. We had subjects complete not one but eight tests of fluid intelligence. We then assigned them to a training group in which they received 20 sessions of training in Jaeggi’s dual n-back task or to one of two control conditions. The “no-contact” control condition was the same as Jaeggi’s control condition. By contrast, in the “active-control” condition, subjects were trained in a task that we designed to be as demanding as dual n-back without tapping working memory capacity. Finally, we had all subjects perform different versions of the eight intelligence tests half way through training and at the end.

And what did we find? Zip. There wasn’t much more than a hint of the pattern of results that Jaeggi reported in any of the eight intelligence tests, and nothing in the predicted direction that even approached statistical significance. If you someone were to ask me to estimate how much 20 sessions of training in dual n-back tasks improves fluid intelligence, I’d say zero.

SP: How would you define intelligence?

DZH: At a conceptual level intelligence is the ability to learn, to profit from experience, the ability to adapt to new situations, and the ability to solve problems. At a technical level I define intelligence as the variance that’s common across a set of tests of cognitive ability.

SP: Explain that last part for us.

DZH: If you give a large sample of people a battery of cognitive tests, spatial ability, verbal ability, mathematical ability and so on, it turns out that someone who does well on one test is going to tend to well on all the others. This common factor we call “psychometric G”, or “g” for general.

SP: How do we currently measure intelligence?

DZH: We measure intelligence with tests that are designed to tap into cognitive processes like retrieving information from memory, manipulating mental visual images, and making rapid judgments about stimuli, as well as tests that require analytical reasoning where you have to make deductions of inferences.

SP: Presumably this is involved in IQ testing. What does IQ really mean?

DZH: IQ is an index of that general factor. In a standardized IQ test people take a bunch of sub-tests. They take tests of comprehension, and special reasoning, etc. IQ is a summary measure that reflects performance across all of those things.

But there is intense speculation still about what IQ really is. It could reflect the sort of the efficiencies and the processes involving working memory and attention. It could reflect strategies for processing information and solving problems. It certainly reflects brain function. But this is the million-dollar question for intelligence researchers: What exactly is intelligence?

SP: Because it’s a value that society deems important, and it has very real implications, right?

DZH: Well one thing we know for sure is that it’s practically useful. IQ, despite what people will say about being a meaningless number, predicts a lot of things. It predicts job performance better than any single variable that we know of. It predicts educational attainment, it predicts income, it predicts health, it predicts longevity even after you take into account sort of obvious confounding factors like socio-economic status. So it captures something important and something useful. If we were to no longer use IQ tests, for things like personnel tests of college admissions, it would cost society billions. IQ is the single best predictor of a lot of outcomes that we value in society.

SP: Is there any proven way to improve our intelligence?

DZH: There’s been all this focus on brain training and cognitive training. But there is not convincing evidence to support the claim by Lumosity and other companies that these programs have far-reaching beneficial effects on cognitive functioning. However, there is actually some evidence that physical exercise, ironically, does improve brain function. And there is something else we can do.

SP: What?

DZH:  I talked about this distinction between fluid intelligence and crystallized intelligence. Fluid intelligence is the ability to solve novel problems and crystallized intelligence is your knowledge acquired through experience.

Fluid intelligence is hard to improve. It’s not readily modifiable like weight. But crystallized intelligence can be improved. You can increase crystallized intelligence through reading. You learn. And this is a good thing to do. We want people to go into the voting booth with enough knowledge to make an informed decision about whom to vote for. And it can come from acquiring crystallized intelligence about the world that might be relevant to making good decisions.

[Photos via Jean et Melo and David Z. Hambrick]

Start your week smarter with our weekly e-mail newsletter. It's your cheat sheet for good ideas. Get it.

Christie Nicholson

About Christie Nicholson

Christie Nicholson is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Christie Nicholson

Christie Nicholson

Contributing Editor

Christie Nicholson produces and hosts Scientific American's podcasts 60-Second Mind and 60-Second Science and is an on-air contributor for Slate, Babelgum, Scientific American, Discovery Channel and Science Channel. She has spoken at MIT/Stanford VLAB, SXSW Interactive, the National Science Foundation, the National Research Council, the Space Studies Board and Brookhaven National Laboratory. She holds degrees from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and Dalhousie University in Canada. She is based in New York.

Follow her on Twitter.

Christie Nicholson

Christie Nicholson

Christie Nicholson does not hold any investments in the technology companies she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

If you liked this, don't miss...
31
Comments

Join the conversation!

Follow via:
RSS
-6
this can't be right
Posted by wildwolf93446  |  Below your threshold
+2 Votes
+ -
brain train
" . . .it is impossible to thing brain training doe not work" ... mybe you rite
Posted by Sunon@...
29th May
0 Votes
+ -
Yes, it can be right
It's quite possible that "brain training" works, but this study showed that the kind of training used in the original study did NOT work.
Posted by phans48167
Updated - 30th May
-1 Votes
+ -
Is this really so shocking?
It's something when you're answering actual text questions in a subject like math, that you can actually understand. But a lot of these things are just the ability to figure out visual patterns. What's the big deal?
Posted by Crash2100
29th May
+4 Votes
+ -
I'll agree with you, Wolf, but. . .
These meaningless exercises are useless precisely because they are useless.

To improve your effective intellegance, learn to play an instrument, take up a form of structured dance (ballroom, Contradance, square dancing, various ethnic dance forms) a martial art (I'm partial to Ki Aikido) even learn a new language (programming or human) or environment (I'm currently exploring the 1&1 Linux ecosystem. . .)

Whatever you learn make it something which is not left behind after the lesson.
Posted by CodeCurmudgeon
29th May
0 Votes
+ -
st
This is a very good answer. If you want to learn something just do it.
As an octogenarian I recall those who were called up for military service and had to learn a lot in a short while, and their lives depended on it. They learnt quickly. Those returning from war had lost five years of their lives doing jobs that had no purpose in peace time. They had to learn new skills quickly as their livelyhood depended on it. They learnt quickly.
Learning useless skills takes you nowhere. My granny was brilliant at crosswords as she sat in a chair all day doing them.
Posted by leonemo
17th May
-4 Votes
+ -
Flip-flop
Ahh, no wonder the scientific community is the butt of so many jokes. I can't wait to read the articles a year from now which state "oops, we were wrong... brain training DOES work".

This reminds me of all their other flip-floped "findings", like the evils/merits of eggs, red wine, beer, chocolate, vitamin pills, coffee, carbs, yadda yadda yadda. Next, please.
Posted by ddferrari
29th May
+7 Votes
+ -
Re: Flip-flops
Nonetheless, the scientific method is how progress is made. Theories are postulated, tests are devised to confirm or disprove the theory, results are published so others can confirm those results. Sometimes other tests appear to confirm the results so the theory gains credence. Later, someone may discover a flaw in the methods used and the theory is modified or discarded. Sorry, but that's how it works: short term volatility, long term gains in understanding.
Posted by phans48167
30th May
0 Votes
+ -
Here's another idea...
Don't publish unfinished research as fact. If they stated that their findings are preliminary, or started the article with "we believe" it would lend a lot more credibility.
Posted by ddferrari
11th Jul
-2 Votes
+ -
thank youuuuu
how would they make money in that case. All these findings are just a way to attract more people and make studies into money making business, so, curious George remains curious forever. This is the sole reason they publish any new finding so it gains popularity and more and more money is dumped into the study. How else do you think these so called scientists get money to produce genetically engineered food .. build new weaponry.. space projects. These people do not even know what form of life exists at the ocean beds of earth and they flying out into space to find life.
Posted by pat2013
23rd Jan
+2 Votes
+ -
brain training
with due respect to Prof Hambrick & colleagues, it didn't take a study for me to "get"

lumosity. I saw the $signs. but thanx for the report. it would have been nice to think i

might train my brain.
Posted by Sunon@...
29th May
-1 Votes
+ -
Sounds like Mr. Hambrick's logic here is flawed...
The logic behind these brain games is to help increase a person's capacity for learning, not to make them instantly smarter. How can a person become smarter by repeating the same type of information over and over? Along those lines with an example, how can one swiftly read through a book and instantly "learn it?" They can't without experience and training. When a person reads a book, they have to take time to logically think through the message of the book so that they gain insight as to understand what the author is saying. The logic here is limitless, but going along with the example of the book, these games help the brain to more swiftly break the information down into something more understandable for one to remember. Most of the games on Luminosity's brain trainer mobile app are geared at working faster with fewer mistakes.

I use Luminosity's Brain Trainer app on my iPhone and have done so for roughly 2 months. To me, it was well worth the $10 a year. Some of the benefits I realize I have gained of many are that I do a better job of having conversations with people in that I am better able to process what is being said to me and come back with an intelligent response of my own. I'm also more efficient at memory tasks especially at picture memory. One small example is I can write a note down on a stickie note and even if I can't remember exactly what I wrote, I can tend to pull a picture of the note in my head and read what was written on it. In addition, I no longer have to rely on my wife to remind me of most events (except for those I don't want to do and she makes sure to remind me). In math, I no longer get brain cramps when doing many arithmetic equations. I took statistics last year and only about half of it made sense. I had to break the work down into 15-20 min segments because I'd get a headache and have to stop. Now, I have no issues spending 2-3+ hours working with numbers.

Probably the biggest benefit gained has been getting rid of the headaches. This may also be from me working sudoku puzzles in tangent with doing the training apps. I wanted to get past the point to where I no longer had headaches and be forced to quit working my brain. I forced myself to keep doing both sudoku puzzles and the training apps through the headache doing a little more each day. Now unless I don't get enough sleep (less than 7 hours), it usually takes a few hours before I get these headaches and even then I'm usually able to continue working through them unlike before.

At the end of the day, it all boils down to what you do with this information. If you perceive that it's a waste of time, then it will be. It's also about getting past just being satisfied, and being motivated to learn. For me, these training games get and keep my brain in a state motivated to learn.

If you want to work on being "smarter" a book I'd recommend is "Critical Thinking: Tools for Taking Charge of Your Professional and Personal Life" by Richard Paul.
Posted by Nate413
29th May
+5 Votes
+ -
Re: Flawed logic
Sorry, but one person's subjective experience has been proven over and over again to be extremely unreliable. That's exactly why the scientific method was established.
Posted by phans48167
30th May
+3 Votes
+ -
Ironic, isn't it...
that smart planet would be home to so many stupid commentators!

Can't wait to see the study; sounds very interesting.
Posted by FastFrankie
8th Jun
-2 Votes
+ -
For Two People, our lives have been improved.
For me, brain training has really helped. Whether my IQ is higher or not, I do not know. I do know that my quality of life has improved greatly. I did brain training on my android phone first.

I got such great gains in my memory, that I tried Lumosity. With in a few days working with the free trial, I knew I was gaining. I was 49 at the time and it was like a brain fog began to lift.

I read someone complaining money was involved like it was evil to make money on something that is helping people. Well, I am a businessman and my labors and investment need to be compensated. Bill Gates, Steven Jobs, Andrew Carnegie all are business men that took something to the next level and gained. Therefore, why is Lumosity wrong when so many people are gaining in their quality of life.

I signed up for Lumosity at around 20 million users in May. Rachel recently signed up and her number was around 25 million. In only three lessons she noticed that her recall for peoples names she met on the phone were improving greatly. She is a purchasing rep in a very high paced hospital.

Lets look at the success of the company and realize word of mouth is causing Lumosity to grow along with advertising but let's face it, 5 million more users in under a year, doesn't that speak for itself? Both Rachel and I tell any body that will listen what a gain Lumosity is for us.

My memory is the most important part to me that has improved. Overall on Lumosity I am in the 99.3rd percentile. I didn't start there but I have been faithful.

On two world wide android brain training games, I have been on the leader board for months as high as 24th and 14th in problem solving and memory but this Lumosity has taken my brain to another level.

I recommend brain training games highly. They may or may not increase IQ but for myself, Rachel and the guy a ways above me, our lives have been improved.
Posted by firewoodtime2
23rd Oct
+3 Votes
+ -
How to help your aging brain - it's not using games!
These 'brain training' games are being aggressively and attractively marketed even though research does not support their effectiveness. I suspect that they are attractive to companies selling them as they are marketable and a good money spinner, whereas we like to buy them because they seem like a fun and easy way to help ourselves. In fact, the research clearly shows that we really don't need to buy anything at all in order to 'train' our brains and prepare ourselves for good cognitive health as we age. It confirms, rather, that cognitively healthy people eat and sleep well, exercise daily, keep socially engaged and are active and learn new things. This is a lifestyle not a product!
Posted by Jen62
10th Nov
-1 Votes
+ -
At birth or in early years??
Is fluid intelligence determined at conception, birth or during early years?

If it is fixed at conception there is nothing we can do to change it. If it develops in the period prior to birth, maybe we can. If it develops during early years we can influence it by education (in a broad sense).
Seems to me it is one of the most important questions for science to answer.
Posted by RobSlack
16th Nov
-2 Votes
+ -
can intelligence be measured?
well even more important question is... what is intelligence??? as for an uneducated person can be intelligent. As, Darwin simply went around the world and collected species and tried to make sense out of evollution. Should intelligence be a measure of how fast and how well you grasp things?? and then how fast you can utilize the info you know in a certain scenario? Intelligence can not be measured, just like how much info is stored in an individuals brain cannot be measured. As, a lot of biotic and abiotic factors play a role when a person is processing/storing info and everyone does it differently. For eg: Some people need the feel of pressure to bring out the best in them and some people perform poorly under pressure.
Posted by pat2013
23rd Jan
-2 Votes
+ -
Calm down, ladies
*** WARNING - my english is not very good - might have commited grammatical murder in the major third degree ***

Stop being so straight-forward, guys and gals.

"Psychologists have been interested in the idea of improving intelligence for over a century."

And yet, only in 2008 we had some research that BARELY scratched the surface. Now it's already proven to be wrong. That does not mean, however, that brain training games don't work. We need more studies about that. I concur with the guy who commented that learning a musical instrument, a language or dance or anything that will require a huge concentration and mind effort will be probably better than a brain-game. The thing is that those activities requires so much time, and in this busy society we live in, for some it's just not possible to commit time to those.

I can see the attractive those brain games have. They don't take much of your time. Only 20 minutes per day and you will get good results eventually, just like the gym (people usually train for 40 minutes to 1 hour).

I guess we need to wait for more research on this are, and just stop jumping to conclusions. Or we can become scientists and help =D
Posted by GabeTheDaft
Updated - 28th Nov
+3 Votes
+ -
brain-training games
I would like to see this research expanded to include treatment of the ADD/Attention Deficit Hyper Disorder individual. I am using a feedback program called Play Attention with my 8 year old and it has helped tremendously, it is working. Unlike other brain-training programs, this one does not focus on intellect, it is a behavior shaping program that helps her focus, pay attention and avoid distraction. It was developed by a teacher who wanted to help his students with this different nature without the side effects of medication. It is based on NASA technology and the company's premise is that the mind does have the capacity to grow, change and adapt. I believe it because I see it: she now has friends, her grades are up and she is doing great in school.
Posted by jnystrom1
9th Jan
+1 Vote
+ -
brain training
I think the key to improving memory, at least, is learning new things, therefore creating new pathways in the circuitry of your brain. If all you do are crossword puzzles daily to help keep your mind sharp, you get good only at crossword puzzle patterns. Crossword puzzles by myself are frustrating but I have a friend who thinks differently than I and when we've done crosswords together, they become fun and I found I have learned a different way to think. Trying new things can create these new synapses in your brain. I think you must do different things every day. It could be as easy as organizing a drawer one day, taking a walk somewhere new, taking a class, joining a group of some kind, to stimulate your brain. I read an article in the last year or two in Scientific American Mind that made sense to me, otherwise I can't cite anything to back this up. As the button below says, "Add Your Opinion." This is mine.
Posted by czarinatx
25th Jan
-2 Votes
+ -
brain training
oh trust me it definitely makes your brain smarter- im a chess player and i know what it feels like when you are pushing your brain to the limits and i've seen games on luminosity that give me the same feeling but in some ways in a far more intense manner because it is so specified (the luminosity game exercises) ...after training on luminosity i've gone on to play chess and have been much much faster and far more efficient- trust me these brain games really work but you cant be lazy, you really have to use your brain power and you will see instant results- trust me its worth the money
Posted by dcr210
29th Jan
+1 Vote
+ -
You all need to get a clue and buy a vowel and watch PBS.
PBS has aired several shows from NOVA and Frontline on the brain including how we learn and the growth spurts that occur in stages that make learning possible... There is no game that is going to make anyone grow more neurons. There is no game that will make anyone smarter. If you want a smart kid, give them proper nutrition (organic foods are far better and more nutritious than anything else), help them develop a love of reading and learning, dont stagnate their learning with a boring classroom, help, love, and nurture them. Learning games are nothing more than snake oil and wishful thinking.
Posted by i8thecat4
19th Feb
0 Votes
+ -
When I was young...
When I was young, my parents did not allow me to play any street game. They always want me to play mind games. But with this study, I think I can now argue this with parents. Thanks for publishing this essay.
Posted by Matthew0824
Updated - 26th Feb
+1 Vote
+ -
memory banco
I spent one week registering items in a tool lending situation by reading off the numbers instead of scanning, and dialing numbers by hand instead of just punching up the name on my cellie. I found that in just two days, I had pretty much memorized them all with no effort (and just a few mistakes).
Sometimes progress doesn't.
Posted by sunnydais
18th Mar
+1 Vote
+ -
I see the difference like this
There are two different things being a bit muddled together here. One is memorized knowledge, the other is the intelligence that uses this knowledge. One without the other is not much good. You might be knowledgeable or "wise" in that You have read and studied much. But without intelligence You are just a walking factbook. Or You can be very intelligent, but without facts You have nothing to work with, base new ideas upon.
There are many ways to train Your memory, fewer to train Your intelligence, but by training Your memory and increasing it, You are giving Your intelligence more "building blocks" to work with. So in a way You can expand Your intelligence, even if not actually "train" it. One of my mottos is: "An intelligent person can get out of situations that a wise person never gets into."
As for mindtraining programs: if You enjoy them, use them. An enjoyed life is better than a smart life. Being smart can be very arduous.
Posted by Dukhalion
25th Mar
0 Votes
+ -
Marvelous
There is currently quite a lot of information around this subject on the net and some are most definitely better than others. You have caught the detail here just right which makes for a refreshing change.
mba dissertation
Posted by broadbenn
12th Apr
0 Votes
+ -
I think you meant "Spatial"
"They take tests of comprehension, and special reasoning, etc."
Should probably be:
"They take tests of comprehension, and spatial reasoning, etc."

I'm surprised you didn't ask about EQ, which is largely proffered as the 2.0 version of IQ. DZH says that IQ is predictive of performance, but I'm fairly certain that EQ is promoted as more accurately predicting socio-economic success in life.

Also, the statement that brain-training doesn't increase fluid intelligence doesn't seem to exclude the possibility of increasing crystallized intelligence. Brain-training might be mode-specific (so if you play solitaire or sudoku all day, that's what you become excellent at) but that doesn't mean it has no application. Probably the "games" available online aren't very helpful, though.
Posted by CanadianThinkTank
13th Apr
0 Votes
+ -
marvellous
I have found the post very useful and informative. Essay Writing UK
Posted by jackpeterwarn
Updated - 16th Apr
0 Votes
+ -
Absolutely Beautiful!
Thanks, you have made it easy for me to understand.custom writer research paper
Posted by Keith Mortan
17th Apr
0 Votes
+ -
Maybe it doesn't work for normal memories
But it might help those of us with memory transfer problems. See
http://ezinearticles.com/?Improving-Short-Term-Memory-If-You-Have-Aspergers-Syndrome-Or-Nonverbal-Learning-Disorder&id=3098498
Posted by ka5s@...
3rd May
Join the conversation
Formatting +
BB Codes - Note: HTML is not supported in forums
  • [b] Bold [/b]
  • [i] Italic [/i]
  • [u] Underline [/u]
  • [s] Strikethrough [/s]
  • [q] "Quote" [/q]
  • [ol][*] 1. Ordered List [/ol]
  • [ul][*] · Unordered List [/ul]
  • [pre] Preformat [/pre]
  • [quote] "Blockquote" [/quote]

Join the SmartPlanet community and join the conversation! Signing up is fast and free. Don't wait -- we want to hear your opinion!