Studies Dispute Benefits of Brain Training






While programs to improve students' working memory are among the hottest new education interventions, new studies are calling into question whether exercises to improve this foundational skill can actually translate into greater intelligence, problem-solving ability, or academic achievement.

Working memory is the system the mind uses to hold information during decisionmaking and analysis.

As much as half



of the variation in individual intelligence can be explained by differences in working-memory capacity, research shows. Working memory has come to be considered by researchers and educators as a key leverage point in boosting brainpower overall—and programs designed to strengthen it are already finding their way into some schools and homes.

But a

systematic review of 23 studies

on working-memory training programs, published online last month by the journal

Developmental Psychology

, found such training produced few long-term benefits to working-memory skills and no improvements to other cognitive skills like verbal ability, attention,...



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