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Video Games May Sharpen Older Minds
Study: Older adults boost memory, reasoning by
playing strategic video game 'Rise of Nations'
By Miranda Hitti WebMD Health News
Playing strategic video games may improve
memory, reasoning, and other "executive" mental
skills in older adults.
That's according to a new study published in
Psychology and Aging.
The study included 39 healthy older adults
(average age: 69-70) living near the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. None of them
were video game players when the study started.
First, participants took various mental skills
tests. Next, they were split into two groups.
Over the next two months, people in one group
played a strategic video game called Rise of
Nations for 15 sessions, with each session
lasting 90 minutes. For comparison, people in
the other group didn't play any video games.
In Rise of Nations, each player picks a country
and their tasks include claiming more territory,
building cities, building "wonders" within
cities, managing infrastructure, defending
against enemies, and using tools such as
diplomacy and espionage. It's geopolitical
wheeling and dealing, requiring multitasking and
equal parts cunning and bravado -- Machiavelli
crossed with Napoleon.
"You need merchants. You need an army to protect
yourself and you have to make sure you're
spending some of your resources on education and
food," researcher Chandramallika Basak, PhD,
says in a news release.
"This game stresses resource management and
planning, which I think for older adults is
important because many of them independently
plan and manage their resources.
Video Game Players' Advantage
When the experiment ended, all participants had
their mental skills tested again.
Compared with people who hadn't played any video
games, the Rise of Nations players showed
greater improvement of their working memory,
short-term memory, reasoning, and ability to
switch tasks.
The researchers note that they don't know if the
results would have been different if the
comparison group had played a different type of
video game instead of sitting on the sidelines.
The researchers report no ties to the maker of
Rise of Nations; the study was funded by a grant
from the National Institute on Aging.
© WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.
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Compared with people who hadn't
played any video games, the Rise of Nations players
showed greater improvement of their working memory,
short-term memory, reasoning, and ability to switch
tasks. |
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