Back
Evidence Summary
What is an Evidence Summary?
Key messages from scientific research that's ready to be acted on
Got It, Hide this
In people with mild cognitive impairment, computerized cognitive training improves cognitive outcomes by a moderate amount immediately after training
Hill NT, Mowszowski L, Naismith SL, et al. Computerized Cognitive Training in Older Adults With Mild Cognitive Impairment or Dementia: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Am J Psychiatry. 2016 Nov 14. Epub ahead of print.
Review question
In people with mild cognitive impairment or dementia, does computerized cognitive training improve cognitive abilities or behaviour?
Background
Mild cognitive impairment includes problems with thinking, memory, language, and decision-making that are noticeable but usually don’t affect daily living. Dementia is cognitive impairment that is serious enough to interfere with everyday living activities.
Computerized cognitive training has people do mentally challenging tasks on a computer, allowing them to practice their cognitive skills. It is believed that cognitive training may reduce the risk of worsening cognitive function over time.
How the review was done
The researchers did a systematic review, searching for studies published to July 2016. They found 25 randomized controlled trials (29 treatment comparisons) with 686 people with mild cognitive impairment and 389 people with dementia (average age 60 years or older, 52% to 64% women).
The key features of the trials were:
- people had mild cognitive impairment or dementia;
- computerized cognitive training was done on a computer using drill and practice of cognitive skills, videogames, or virtual reality;
- training was mostly supervised, done for at least 4 hours, and most people had between 6 and 36 hours of training;
- computerized cognitive training was compared with no training, sham training, a different intervention (e.g., psychoeducation), or pencil-and-paper training; and
- most outcomes were measured immediately after training was completed.
What the researchers found
Immediately after training in people with mild cognitive impairment, computerized cognitive training:
- improved working memory by a large amount;
- improved overall cognitive outcomes, global cognitive ability, attention, psychosocial functioning, verbal memory, verbal learning, and nonverbal learning by a moderate amount; and
- did not change nonverbal memory, visuospatial skills, executive function (problem-solving, judgment, and decision-making), processing speed, language, or activities of daily living.
Immediately after training in people with dementia, computerized cognitive training:
- improved visuospatial skills by a moderate amount;
- improved overall cognitive outcomes by a small amount; and
- did not change any other cognitive outcomes.
Only 1 trial in people with mild cognitive impairment showed that cognitive outcomes were still improved at 12 weeks after training was complete.
Conclusions
In people with mild cognitive impairment, computerized cognitive training improves overall cognitive outcomes by a moderate amount immediately after training. In people with dementia, computerized cognitive training improves few cognitive outcomes.
Computerized cognitive training vs control* in older people with mild cognitive impairment or dementia
Overall cognitive outcomes | Moderate improvement (based on 17 treatment comparisons) | Small improvement (based on 11 treatment comparisons) |
Global cognitive ability | Moderate improvement (based on 12 treatment comparisons) | No effect (based on 7 treatment comparisons) |
Attention | Moderate improvement (based on 6 treatment comparisons) | No effect (based on 2 treatment comparisons) |
Psychosocial functioning | Moderate improvement (based on 8 treatment comparisons) | No effect (based on 6 treatment comparisons) |
Working memory | Large improvement (based on 9 treatment comparisons) | No effect (based on 4 treatment comparisons) |
Verbal memory | Moderate improvement (based on 12 treatment comparisons) | No effect (based on 9 treatment comparisons) |
Verbal learning | Moderate improvement (based on 11 treatment comparisons) | No effect (based on 4 treatment comparisons) |
Nonverbal memory | No effect (based on 7 treatment comparisons) | No effect (based on 1 treatment comparison) |
Nonverbal learning | Moderate improvement (based on 8 treatment comparisons) | No effect (based on 2 treatment comparisons) |
Visuospatial skills | No effect (based on 5 treatment comparisons) | Moderate improvement (based on 3 treatment comparisons) |
Activities of daily living | No effect (based on 6 treatment comparisons) | No effect (based on 6 treatment comparisons) |
Executive function | No effect (based on 13 treatment comparisons) | No effect (based on 5 treatment comparisons) |
Processing speed | No effect (based on 7 treatment comparisons) | No effect (based on 2 treatment comparisons) |
Language | No effect (based on 6 treatment comparisons) | No effect (based on 4 treatment comparisons) |
Glossary
Cognitive function
Mental processes, including thinking, learning and remembering.
Cognitive impairment
Trouble remembering, learning new things, concentrating, or making decisions that affect everyday life.
Randomized controlled trials
Studies where people are assigned to one of the treatments purely by chance.
Systematic review
A comprehensive evaluation of the available research evidence on a particular topic.
Related Evidence Summaries
-
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (2019)
-
American Journal of Alzheimers Diseases and Other Dementias (2018)
-
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (2014)
Related Web Resources
-
Informed Health Online
Gingko supplements (240 mg per day) may help reduce symptoms of Alzheimer's disease and enable you to perform daily tasks better. Be aware that gingko could interact with other medications, so talk to your doctor before taking any supplements.
-
HealthLine
Dementia affects millions of people around the world, and there is no current treatment. There are a few ways to lower your risk. Eat a well-balanced diet, exercise, stay social, and limit alcohol and smoking.
-
Canadian Institute for Health Information
Older adults with dementia may need to move into long-term care homes if they can no longer stay at home. These people have higher risk of getting physically restrained or given antipsychotic medication. Changes to policy and education have made these things happen less often.
DISCLAIMER These summaries are provided for informational purposes only. They are not a substitute for advice from your own health care professional. The summaries may be reproduced for not-for-profit educational purposes only. Any other uses must be approved by the McMaster Optimal Aging Portal
(
info@mcmasteroptimalaging.org).