A large, 20-year trial showed that speedy cognitive exercises could reduce the risk of Alzheimer's disease and other types of dementia. The question is, could these tasks be adapted into video games?
Occupational and environmental health and safety (OEHS) training has long been a central element of regulatory compliance and organizational risk management. Globally, employers invest substantial ...
Older adults who received cognitive speed training, plus booster sessions one and three years later, were 25% less likely to be diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias (ADRD) in the ...
A simple brain-training program that sharpens how quickly older adults process visual information may have a surprisingly powerful long-term payoff. In a major 20-year study of adults 65 and older, ...
Worker safety is a top priority for organizations across all industries, especially considering how dangerous some day-to-day tasks can be. Accidents and human error ...
Cybersecurity relies as much on human behavior as it does on technology. Even the most robust firewalls can be rendered ineffective with a single thoughtless click. As organizations face increasingly ...
What’s the one area in cybersecurity that is overdue for change? It's security awareness training. After three decades of underwhelming results, it’s clear that ...
Cognitive “speed training” can reduce the risk of a dementia diagnosis by 25 per cent – that’s according to results from the world’s first randomised controlled trial of any intervention against the ...
A little brain training today may help stave off Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia for at least 20 years. That's the conclusion of a study of older adults who participated in a cognitive ...
Brain-training exercises may reduce the risk of dementia if they involve speedy thinking, whereas exercises involving memorization or reasoning have no effect on dementia risk, a two-decade-long trial ...