Monday 10 August 2015

11 August, 2015

Smartphone game helps reduce schizophrenia symptoms

Researchers at Cambridge University have developed a smartphone game that can help reduce symptoms of schizophrenia. 

The game, called Wizard, helps those diagnosed with schizophrenia practice day-to-day cognitive skills that keep their brains sharp.
 

It has been designed to help deal with symptoms such as paranoia and hallucinations, and has been paired with the popular brain-training app, Peak.
 

"In conjunction with medication and current psychological therapies, (Wizard) could help people with schizophrenia minimise the impact of their illness in their everyday life," The Guardian quoted a research team member as saying.

The study found that 22 patients who played the memory game committed fewer errors and needed less effort to remember the location of different patterns of specific tests.
 

Improvements in memory retention, remembering dates and times and understanding the context, conversation and other forms of communication are all categories that improved when patients used the game on a regular basis.
 

Wizard is currently available for iOS platform only, and soon it would be available for Android.
 

The study was published in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society.


11.08.2015



Music could be new frontier in epilepsy treatment

In conjunction with traditional treatment, music may be used as a novel intervention to help prevent seizures in people with epilepsy, says a new study. 

The researchers found that brains of people with epilepsy appear to react to music differently from the brains of those who do not have the disorder.

"We believe that music could potentially be used as an intervention to help people with epilepsy," said one of the researchers Christine Charyton, adjunct assistant professor and visiting assistant professor of neurology at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Centre in Columbus, Ohio, US.
 

Approximately 80 percent of epilepsy cases are what is known as temporal lobe epilepsy, in which the seizures appear to originate in the temporal lobe of the brain.
 

Music is processed in the auditory cortex in this same region of the brain, which was why the researchers wanted to study the effect of music on the brains of people with epilepsy.
 

The researchers compared the musical processing abilities of the brains of people with and without epilepsy using an electroencephalogram, where electrodes are attached to the scalp to detect and record brain wave patterns.
 

They collected data from 21 patients who were in the epilepsy monitoring unit at a US medical centre between September 2012 and May 2014.
 

The researchers found significantly higher levels of brain wave activity in participants when they were listening to music.
  More importantly brain wave activity in people with epilepsy tended to synchronize more with the music, especially in the temporal lobe, than in people without epilepsy, Charyton said. 

Charyton said this research suggests music might be a novel intervention to help people with epilepsy.
 

The research was presented at the American Psychological Association's 123rd annual convention in Toronto.
 



11.08.2015







Once you learn to quit, it becomes a habit

by Vince Lombardi


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