Psychomotor Speed

“Life goes by pretty fast. If you don’t stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.” – Ferris Bueller in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986)

One ability that is usually measured in studies of cognitive aging is “psychomotor speed.” It’s often considered as a separate ability and has been shown to decline with increasing age. What is it, and why is it important?

Psychomotor speed means being able to coordinate thinking fast with doing something fast. Driving a car is an obvious example. You have to move your eyes and your head to know what’s going on around you. You have to think about what your car is doing, and what other drivers, pedestrians, and animals are going to do. And you have to respond to what you see by doing something such as pressing the brake or accelerator pedals, turning the steering wheel, or using the turn signal. The “psycho” in psychomotor refers to the thinking part of this skill, while the “motor” part refers to doing something with your muscles, like hitting the break when you see a ball bouncing into the street. When you’re younger, you’re generally able to do this sort of thing much more quickly than you can as you get older. Some studies show that psychomotor speed starts declining in someone’s 20s, and continues to decline with age.

Like Ferris Bueller says, “life goes by pretty fast.” A lot of things go by pretty fast, and declines in psychomotor speed affect more than just driving ability. Another example that isn’t quite as obvious is your ability to understand conversations. You may not think about it this way, but understanding what people are saying requires that you take in all sorts of sounds, sort out what’s meaningful from what’s noise, and then figure out what a speaker is saying based on this complex of sound and meaning. And you have to do all of this pretty quickly, before the next volley of sound comes at you. Some people believe that this is one of the issues that causes older people to say they have trouble understanding conversation. It’s not just having problems in hearing (that can often be helped with a hearing aid) but also with speed of processing or psychomotor speed.

Since psychomotor speed is something that can be improved with training, it may be possible for older people to improve it in ways that might help in everyday life. Both auditory (hearing) and visual speed training are included in many computer brain training programs.


Latest

Mindfulness meditation as practiced over a long period by experts makes clear changes in someone’s brain function. But what about those of us who don’t have a few years to sit in a monastery in the Himalayas? A new study shows that even brief meditation practice can improve attention.

Researchers at Wake Forest University studied whether just four days of training (at just 20 minutes a day) could make a difference in participants’ mood, energy, and cognition. Undergraduate students (average age 22 years) either participated in the meditation sessions or spent a similar amount of time sitting quietly and listening to an audio book.

Participants in the meditation condition showed decreases in anxiety and improvements in several mental processing tasks compared to those in the audio book group. The meditators’ performance on one aspect of a working memory task (how many answers they got correct in a row) suggested that they may have improved their attention.

This is a small and very preliminary study that extends others’ work on meditation and the brain.It shows that even brief meditation practice can make a difference. you don’t have to be a Buddhist monk to learn to still your mind and pay better attention. Paying attention may be one of the most important things you can do to improve your brain’s functioning.

Reference:

Zeidan F et al.(in press) Mindfulness meditation improves cognition: Evidence of brief mental training. Consciousness and Cognition, doi:10.1016/j.concog.2010.03.014

I saw an interesting blog post yesterday evening on the site of the Huffington Post about the potential benefits of meditation – or at least about what one woman thinks might be the benefits. Priscilla Warner writes about the contrast between Tibetan monks’ apparent calm, evident even on brain scans, and her own anxiety disorder. Ms. Warner says that she suffers from panic disorder, a severe form of anxiety in which a person can have multiple anxiety attacks every day, even in the middle of the night. Her post is titled “I Want the Brain of a Monk” Although most people don’t suffer from anxiety this severe, many people have symptoms of anxiety. And research has consistently shown that higher levels of anxiety are related to more memory problems.

What’s the relation to brain fitness? In my brain fitness class, I often mention the usefulness of meditation in helping reduce stress and anxiety, both of which have negative effects on memory. You don’t have to go to Tibet to get the benefits of meditation. If you simply take 10 minutes several times a day to break in to the ongoing rush of getting things done, you’ve made a start. Use those 10 minutes to sit quietly, relax your muscles, and breathe deeply.

If you do that every day for two weeks, I think you’ll notice that you feel calmer and better able to focus. And if you’re better able to focus, you will be better able to pay attention and remember things.

Although many people are excited about the potential for using computers to train their brains, we shouldn’t forget that other techniques have been used to the train the brain for many centuries. I’m thinking about the large number of techniques for meditation. While free computer software still requires an investment in a computer, meditation only asks you to sit or lie quietly and focus your mind.

A recently-published study shows parts of the brain in long-term meditators are larger than the same parts of the brain in people who don’t meditate. The article by Eileen Luders and her colleagues appeared in a recent issue of the journal Neuroimage (Vol. 45, No. 3, pp. 672-678, April 15, 2009). The study showed that portions of the orbitofrontal cortex and the hippocampus were larger in persons who had been regular meditators for 5 or more years. The study is interesting because the parts of the brain that were larger are often thought to be important in helping people keep themselves emotionally balanced.

A number of strategies are likely to be helpful for meditators. There has been a great deal of interest over the last several years in mindfulness meditation. Researchers have studied how it can be used in reducing anxiety and depression. Mindfulness is based on Buddhist meditation (for a brief article, click here) but you don’t have to be a Buddhist to practice meditation. In fact, one of the most important persons who has promoted mindfulness is Jon Kabat-Zinn, a researcher at the University of Massachusetts. You can see a video presentation by him on YouTube by clicking here.