Cognitive training and noninvasive, painless brain stimulation can improve cognitive and brain functions

Updated on: Friday, May 17, 2013

Brain stimulation may improve your ability to manipulate numbers in your head, a new Oxford study has found. In the Cell Press journal Current Biology, scientists described a fast and painless way to do better at mental arithmetic.

"With just five days of cognitive training and noninvasive, painless brain stimulation, we were able to bring about long-lasting improvements in cognitive and brain functions," said Roi Cohen Kadosh of the University of Oxford.
 
The improvements held for a period of six months after training. Researchers are not sure how exactly this relatively new method of stimulation, called transcranial random noise stimulation (TRNS), works.
 
However, they said the evidence suggests that it allows the brain to work more efficiently by making neurons fire more synchronously.
 
Cohen Kadosh and his colleagues had shown previously that another form of brain stimulation could make people better at learning and processing new numbers. But, he said, TRNS is even less perceptible to those receiving it.
 
TRNS also has the potential to help even more people. That's because it has been shown to improve mental arithmetic - the ability to add, subtract, or multiply a string of numbers in your head, for example - not just new number learning.
 
Ultimately, Cohen Kadosh said, with better integration of neuroscience and education, this line of study could really help humans reach our cognitive potential in math and beyond.
 
It might also be of particular help to those suffering with neurodegenerative illness, stroke, or learning difficulties.
 
"Maths is a highly complex cognitive faculty that is based on a myriad of different abilities. If we can enhance mathematics, therefore, there is a good chance that we will be able to enhance simpler cognitive functions," Cohen Kadosh said.

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