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First-Time Internet Users find boost in
Brain Function after just one week
Newswise — You can teach an old dog new
tricks, say UCLA scientists who found that
middle-aged and older adults with little
Internet experience were able to trigger key
centers in the brain that control
decision-making and complex reasoning after
just one week of surfing the Web.
The findings, presented Oct. 19 at the 2009
meeting of the Society for Neuroscience,
suggest that Internet training can stimulate
neural activation patterns and could
potentially enhance brain function and
cognition in older adults.
As the brain ages, a number of structural
and functional changes occur, including
atrophy, reductions in cell activity and
increases in deposits of amyloid plaques and
tau tangles, which can impact cognitive
function.
Research has shown that mental stimulation
similar to that which occurs in individuals
who frequently use the Internet may affect
the efficiency of cognitive processing and
alter the way the brain encodes new
information.
"We found that for older people with minimal
experience, performing Internet searches for
even a relatively short period of time can
change brain activity patterns and enhance
function," said study author Dr. Gary Small,
a professor of psychiatry at the Semel
Institute for Neuroscience and Human
Behavior at UCLA and the author of "iBrain,"
a book that describes the impact of new
technology on the brain and behavior.
The UCLA team worked with 24 neurologically
normal volunteers between the ages of 55 and
78.
Prior to the study, half the
participants used the Internet daily, while
the other half had very little
experience.
Age, educational level and
gender were similar between the two groups.
Study participants performed Web searches
while undergoing functional magnetic
resonance imaging (fMRI) scans, which
recorded the subtle brain-circuitry changes
experienced during this activity.
This type
of scan tracks brain activity by measuring
the level of cerebral blood flow during
cognitive tasks.
After the initial brain scan, participants
went home and conducted Internet searches
for one hour a day for a total of seven
days over a two-week period.
These practice
searches involved using the Internet to
answer questions about various topics by
exploring different websites and reading
information.
Participants then received a
second brain scan using the same Internet
simulation task but with different topics.
The first scan of participants with little
Internet experience demonstrated brain
activity in regions controlling language,
reading, memory and visual abilities, which
are located in the frontal, temporal,
parietal, visual and posterior cingulate
regions, researchers said.
The second brain
scan of these participants, conducted after
the practice Internet searches at home,
demonstrated activation of these same
regions, as well as triggering of the middle
frontal gyrus and inferior frontal gyrus –
areas of the brain known to be important in
working memory and decision-making.
Thus, after Internet training at home,
participants with minimal online experience
displayed brain activation patterns very
similar to those seen in the group of savvy
Internet users – after just a brief period
of time.
"The results suggest that searching online
may be a simple form of brain exercise that
might be employed to enhance cognition in
older adults," said Teena D. Moody, the
study's first author and a senior research
associate at the Semel Institute at UCLA.
When performing an Internet search, the
ability to hold important information in
working memory and to extract the important
points from competing graphics and words is
essential, Moody noted.
Previous research by the UCLA team found
that searching online resulted in a more
than twofold increase in brain activation in
older adults with prior experience,
compared with those with little Internet
experience.
According to Small, the new
findings suggest that it may take only days
for those with minimal experience to match
the activity levels of those with years of
experience.
Additional studies may address the impact of
the Internet on younger individuals and help
identify aspects of online searching that
generate the greatest levels of brain
activation.
The study was funded by the Parvin
Foundation.
Susan Y. Bookheimer, professor of psychiatry
and biobehavioral sciences at the Semel
Institute at UCLA, was also an author of
this study. Himaja Gaddipati, a UCLA
neuroscience student, and Jennifer Brace, a
UCLA doctoral student in neuroscience,
contributed to the work.
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