ES Money. The Escapist. The Reveller. The Optimist. ES Best. ES Mag. Follow us:. Boris Johnson hit by care backlash. Password Please enter a valid password. Submit Submit. In addition to healthy people, we hope that the game will be beneficial for patients who have impairments in attention, including those with ADHD or traumatic brain injury.
We plan to start a study with traumatic brain injury patients this year. Our evidence-based game is developed interactively and the games developer, Tom Piercy, ensures that it is engaging and fun to play. The level of difficulty is matched to the individual player and participants enjoy the challenge of the cognitive training. This will allow Decoder to become accessible to the public. Peak has developed a version for Apple devices and is releasing the game today as part of the Peak Brain Training app.
Peak Brain Training is available from the App Store for free and Decoder will be available to both free and pro users as part of their daily workout, the day after users have completed their initial assessment. The company plans to make a version available for Android devices later this year.
This is our second collaboration with Professor Sahakian and her work over the years shows that playing games can bring significant benefits to brains. We are pleased to be able to bring Decoder to the Peak community, to help people overcome their attention problems.
One group would act as a no-game control group, while the other two groups participated in eight, one-hour gameplay sessions over the course of a month. One game group played Decoder , while the other group played Bingo.
To test attention and concentration levels, at the beginning and end of the study all subjects completed what is called the Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery Rapid Visual Information assessment. This test is claimed to be a "reliable and objective measure of sustained attention. The study concluded that, after just one month of using Decoder , subjects displayed significant and meaningful improvements in attention and concentration compared to those subjects that played no games, and subjects that played Bingo.
While these positive results are certainly clear and convincing within the parameters described by the study, some experts are questioning how relevant they are to real-life cognitive outcomes. Til Wykes, from King's College London, suggests the research is welcome but it may not ultimately be that beneficial. Other researchers are suggesting any overall improvements in concentration identified by the study may stem from a fundamental similarity between the Decoder game and the test used to assess subjects.
Baguley isn't the only expert to question the veracity of the study's conclusions in relation to a similarity between the the brain-training app and the test used to measure its effects. Nilli Lavie, from University College London, also suggests the app may not be as generally effective as the study claims. To conclude the brain-training app as effective in generally improving attention or concentration, the test to measure efficacy, "needs to be different to the training in order to say that it is not a content-specific task-specific training.
The Decoder brain-training app is commercially available through app developer Peak, which licensed the Cambridge technology.
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