Cognitive Training Changes Hippocampal Function in Mild Cognitive Impairment: A Pilot Study
Abstract
A randomized pilot experiment examined the neural substrates of response to cognitive training in participants with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Participants performed exercises previously demonstrated to improve verbal memory and an active control group performed other computer activities. An auditory-verbal fMRI task was conducted before and after the two-month training program. Verbal memory scores improved significantly and left hippocampal activation increased significantly in the experimental group (gains in 5 of 6 participants) relative to the control group (reductions in all 6 participants). Results suggest that the hippocampus in MCI may retain sufficient neuroplasticity to benefit from cognitive training.
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Article first published online: October 4, 2011
Issue published: October 4, 2011
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PubMed: 21971474
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This article was published in Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease.
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Crossref: 6
- Ιnnovative Health Promotion Strategies: A 6-Month Longitudinal Study on Computerized Cognitive Training for Older Adults with Minor Neurocognitive Disorders
- Longitudinal Cognitive and Physical Training Effectiveness in MCI, Based on the Experience of the Alzheimer’s Hellas Day Care Centre
- Can Cognitive Speed of Processing Training Improve Everyday Functioning Among Older Adults With Psychometrically Defined Mild Cognitive Impairment?
- Do “Brain-Training” Programs Work?
- Multistimulation Group Therapy in Alzheimer’s Disease Promotes Changes in Brain Functioning
- Clinical and Cognitive Correlates of Structural Hippocampal Change in “At-Risk” Older Adults
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