The more regularly people report doing word puzzles such as crosswords, the better their brain function in later life, a large-scale and robust online trial, published today, has found.

Researchers at the University of Exeter Medical School and Kings College, London, analyzed data from more than 17,000 healthy people aged 50 and over, submitted in an online trial. In research presented at the Alzheimer's Association International Conference (AAIC) 2017, the team asked participants how frequently they played word puzzles such as crosswords.
"The study, one of the largest of its kind, used tests from the CogTrackTM and PROTECT online cognitive test systems to assess core aspects of brain function. They found that the more regularly participants engaged with word puzzles, the better they performed on tasks assessing attention, reasoning and memory."
"From their results, researchers calculate that people who engage in word puzzles have brain function equivalent to ten years younger than their age, on tests of grammatical reasoning speed and short term memory accuracy."
Keith Wesnes, Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience at the University of Exeter Medical School, said: "We found direct relationships between the frequency of word puzzle use and the speed and accuracy of performance on nine cognitive tasks assessing a range of aspects of function including attention, reasoning and memory. Performance was consistently better in those who reported engaging in puzzles, and generally improved incrementally with the frequency of puzzle use. For example, on test measures of grammatical reasoning speed and short-term memory accuracy, performing word puzzles was associated with an age-related reduction of around 10 years. We now need to follow up this very exciting association in a clinical trial, to establish whether engaging in puzzles results in improvement in brain function."

"The study used participants in the PROTECT online platform, run by the University of Exeter and Kings College London. Currently, more than 22,000 healthy people aged between 50 and 96 are registered in the study, which is planning further expansion. The online platform enables researchers to conduct and manage large-scale studies without the need for laboratory visits. PROTECT is a 10 year study with participants being followed up annually to enable a better understanding of cognitive trajectories in this age range.
Clive Ballard, Professor of Age-Related Diseases at the University of Exeter Medical School, said: "We know that many of the factors involved in dementia are preventable. It is essential that we find out what lifestyle factors really make a difference to helping people maintain healthy brains to stop the soaring rise of the disease. We can't yet say that crosswords give you a sharper brain -- the next step is to assess whether encouraging people to start playing word games regularly could actually improve their brain function."
"This new research does reveal a link between word puzzles, like crosswords, and memory and thinking skills, but we can't say definitively that regular 'puzzling' improves these skills. To be able to say for sure, the crucial next step is to test if there are benefits in people who take up word puzzles."
Looks like Will Shortz took up a good profession. No puzzle there.
What do you think, cruciverbalists all?
{I see a few holes in the study, but every good crossword puzzle needs a few holes/black squares, eh?}
Steph

Researchers at the University of Exeter Medical School and Kings College, London, analyzed data from more than 17,000 healthy people aged 50 and over, submitted in an online trial. In research presented at the Alzheimer's Association International Conference (AAIC) 2017, the team asked participants how frequently they played word puzzles such as crosswords.
"The study, one of the largest of its kind, used tests from the CogTrackTM and PROTECT online cognitive test systems to assess core aspects of brain function. They found that the more regularly participants engaged with word puzzles, the better they performed on tasks assessing attention, reasoning and memory."
"From their results, researchers calculate that people who engage in word puzzles have brain function equivalent to ten years younger than their age, on tests of grammatical reasoning speed and short term memory accuracy."
Keith Wesnes, Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience at the University of Exeter Medical School, said: "We found direct relationships between the frequency of word puzzle use and the speed and accuracy of performance on nine cognitive tasks assessing a range of aspects of function including attention, reasoning and memory. Performance was consistently better in those who reported engaging in puzzles, and generally improved incrementally with the frequency of puzzle use. For example, on test measures of grammatical reasoning speed and short-term memory accuracy, performing word puzzles was associated with an age-related reduction of around 10 years. We now need to follow up this very exciting association in a clinical trial, to establish whether engaging in puzzles results in improvement in brain function."

"The study used participants in the PROTECT online platform, run by the University of Exeter and Kings College London. Currently, more than 22,000 healthy people aged between 50 and 96 are registered in the study, which is planning further expansion. The online platform enables researchers to conduct and manage large-scale studies without the need for laboratory visits. PROTECT is a 10 year study with participants being followed up annually to enable a better understanding of cognitive trajectories in this age range.
Clive Ballard, Professor of Age-Related Diseases at the University of Exeter Medical School, said: "We know that many of the factors involved in dementia are preventable. It is essential that we find out what lifestyle factors really make a difference to helping people maintain healthy brains to stop the soaring rise of the disease. We can't yet say that crosswords give you a sharper brain -- the next step is to assess whether encouraging people to start playing word games regularly could actually improve their brain function."
"This new research does reveal a link between word puzzles, like crosswords, and memory and thinking skills, but we can't say definitively that regular 'puzzling' improves these skills. To be able to say for sure, the crucial next step is to test if there are benefits in people who take up word puzzles."
Looks like Will Shortz took up a good profession. No puzzle there.
What do you think, cruciverbalists all?
{I see a few holes in the study, but every good crossword puzzle needs a few holes/black squares, eh?}
Steph
Those Brits like to study everything medical! That's what happens when you have those darn government paid health plans!!
ReplyDeleteObviously they aren't accounting for the cryptic puzzles from the Times of London, each of which adds years of frustration. At least for some of us dumb "Murricans".
Here's my favorite recent British medical report.
ReplyDeleteI thought it had long been established that doing crossword puzzles regularly makes your brain better at doing crossword puzzles.
;-)
DeleteA new meaning to Contact .
Grammatical reasoning speed? I am not entirely sure what that means or how it is measured...
ReplyDeleteTo quote Homer Simpson: "It doesn't mean anything. It's like Rama Lama Ding-dong or Give Peace a Chance."
DeleteYes, indeed, holes in the study, Joanne, and in the presentation of the data. . .
DeleteIt's measured in GRSs. . .;-)
DeleteBand a Chicken? No, Banda Fault
ReplyDeleteSHARK SHRUGGING
ReplyDelete40 years ago, at Bell Labs, we used a computer-controlled x-ray micro beam system to study speech production. The subject had metal pellets glued to parts of the articulatory apparatus -- lips, teeth, tongue, palate, etc -- and the computer moved the x- ray beam to track the movements of the pellets during speech.
ReplyDeleteAny exciting revelations from your study?
DeleteSeems like the pellets themselves might affect the speech. . .
Apparently, the data were very useful for speech researchers
DeleteSlimy Lycra-potential Hagfish: Act of Cod
ReplyDeleteI know which crash I'd rather be stuck behind!
DeleteGrab your fondue pot!
DeleteI'd like s'more accidents like that.
DeleteAbsolutely.
Delete"Fondue pot" sounds like the name for a new strain of chocolate edibles.
I remember once driving in a fierce Florida thunderstorm, behind a truck loaded with nitrous oxide, hoping for a little accident...
DeleteHahaha (that's enough).
DeleteI KNEW there was a cartoon in the back of my mind.
DeleteBest sign at today's protest against Betsy De Vos in Denver: "Stop the DeVosTation!"
ReplyDeleteStegomastodon discovery while still in single digits.
ReplyDelete1. Who plays in the dirt? Kids.
Delete2. Who would be more likely to notice something unusual? A kid, or someone who's been around since the dinosaurs, and is therefore used to them?
But, it's not a dinosaur. . .
DeleteIs saying cross words as good for brain function as solving crosswords?
ReplyDeleteLike cedar, pine, cyprus? ;-)
DeleteOr stitch, wind, etc. . .
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeletePerhaps cross laminated timber is the answer.
DeleteMeanwhile, it's always the right time for 1980's music!!! With lines like:
Facts are simple and facts are straight
Facts are lazy and facts are late
Facts all come with points of view
Facts don't do what I want them to
Facts just twist the truth around
Facts are living turned inside out
Facts are getting the best of them
Facts are nothing on the face of things
it's like they knew Kelly Anne Conway >30 years ago.
At cross purposes?
DeleteOr at a cross roads. I have some old cross pens somewhere around here. Fountains of opportunities.
DeleteCrisscrossing the globe, no doubt.
DeleteNew post on "DNA of Ancient Canaanites: Levant, Lebanon, and Lines" is now up.
ReplyDelete