• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

This Drumming Video Game Boosts Working Memory In Older Adults

October 17, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

A video game, created in collaboration with former Grateful Dead drummer Mickey Hart, has been shown to improve the short-term memory of older adults. Developed by the University of California San Francisco’s Neuroscape Center, the game challenges players to drum out a rhythm on a tablet and engages key brain regions associated with musical performance.

Describing the game’s cognition-boosting effects in a new study, researchers explain how they recruited 47 adults aged 60 to 79 to take part in an eight-week experiment. Half of these participants played “Rhythmicity” for 20 minutes a day, five days a week, while the other half spent the same amount of time playing a word search game.

Advertisement

As beginners, gamers were provided with visual cues to help them remember a particular drumming pattern. However, over time these cues were gradually removed, requiring participants to engage their working memory and complete the pattern unassisted.

When the eight weeks were up, participants from both groups were presented with a face recognition task while the researchers recorded their brain activity using electroencephalography (EEG). “Results showed that only musical rhythm training improved face memory, which was associated with increased activity in the superior parietal region of the brain when encoding and maintaining faces,” write the study authors. 

“Thus, musical rhythm training can improve face memory by facilitating how the brain encodes and maintains memories.”

Advertisement

When analyzing participants’ EEG readings, the researchers looked for specific signals associated with three distinct facets of cognition. Overall, they saw no increase in the domains of sensory processing or selective attention but observed a noticeable enhancement in working memory.

“That memory improved at all was amazing,” said Theodore Zanto, director of the Neuroscience Division at Neuroscape, in a statement. “There is a very strong memory training component to this, and it generalized to other forms of memory.”

The fact that improvements in short-term memory activity were localized to the superior parietal lobule is also significant since this brain region is implicated in the visual aspects of musical performance – such as sight-reading sheet music – as well as other non-musical tasks. Previous studies have shown that trained musicians often have more gray matter in this key brain structure than non-musicians.

Advertisement

In addition to developing Rhythmicity, the Neuroscape Center has created a range of other video games that are designed to enhance different areas of cognition in older adults. For instance, a game called Neuroracer has been shown to help aging individuals improve their multitasking ability, while a virtual reality spatial navigation game called Labyrinth boosts long-term memory.

“These are all targeting cognitive control, an ability that is deficient in older adults and that is critical for their quality of life,” said Neuroscape founder and executive director Adam Gazzaley. “These games all have the same underlying adaptive algorithms and approach, but they are using very, very different types of activity. And in all of them we show that you can improve cognitive abilities in this population.”

The study was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Amazon.com goes for jugular in FCC spat with SpaceX’s Musk
  2. Facebook to launch portable version of Portal video chat device
  3. Facebook wraps up deals with Australia media firms, TV broadcaster SBS not included
  4. OPEC+ sticks to plan for gradual oil output hike, price roars higher

Source Link: This Drumming Video Game Boosts Working Memory In Older Adults

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Is Back From Behind The Sun – Still Not An Alien Spacecraft, Though
  • Bowhead Whales Can Live For 200 Years – This May Explain Their Extraordinary Longevity
  • Trump Orders First Nuclear Weapons Test In The US Since 1992 – Here’s What You Need To Know
  • Tiny Triceratops-Tackling Tyrannosaur Was Its Own Species, Not A Baby T. Rex
  • What Makes Ammolite Gemstones, A Rare Kind Of Fossilized Ammonite, So Vibrant? It’s All In The Nacre
  • Something Melted This Tesla’s Windscreen. Could It Have Been A World-First Meteorite Collision?
  • Carnivorous “Death-Ball” Sponge Among 30 New Deep-Sea Weirdos Discovered In The Southern Ocean
  • Chimps Can Revise Beliefs When Confronted With Conflicting Evidence. Can You?
  • Explosive Airbursts, Like Tunguska, Might Be Hiding Among “Halloween Fireballs” Meteor Shower
  • One Of The World’s Rarest Penguins Is Actually Three Subspecies In A Trench Coat
  • “I Am The Allergen”: The Super-Rare Condition That Makes Everyone Else Allergic To You
  • 42,000-Year-Old Yellow Crayon Suggests Neanderthals Created Art – And It’s Still Sharp Too
  • IFLScience Investigates The Loch Ness Monster: A Round-Up Of Our Spooky Season Nessie Deep Dive
  • Why An Eastern Pacific Tear In Earth’s Crust Could Spare The Pacific Northwest… Eventually
  • JWST Reveals Never-Before-Seen Details Of The Red Spider Nebula And It’s Spectacular
  • “Breaking Records By Extraordinary Margins”: 22 Of Earth’s 34 Vital Signs At Record Levels
  • “The Most Important Unsolved Problem In Pure Math”: Where Is Humanity At With Prime Numbers?
  • The “Great Halloween Solar Storms”: 22 Years Ago, One Of The Most Powerful CMEs Ever Hit Earth
  • IFLScience Investigates The Loch Ness Monster: A Documentary On The Science, The Story, And The Power Of Belief
  • Remarkably Preserved 23-Million-Year-Old “Frosty” Rhino Discovered In Canadian Arctic
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version