Sections: Gaming News, Features, Research-Studies, Consoles, Handhelds, DS, Ads & Media, Genres, Educational, Puzzle
French researcher claims Brain Age is faulty
Special Features
Black Friday 2009
Black Friday is almost here! Gadgetell's got you covered with all the latest news on who's offering the best deals. Dangerous crowds? You're on your own.
Live Coverage of E3 2009
The Gamertell team brings us live coverage from the E3 Expo.
Important Importables
Jenni Lada brings us information about all of the groovy new gaming imports from around the world.





The University of Rennes, Brittany, contend people who play Brain Age do not show a jump in memory. In fact, based on their data, it leads to memory becoming worse.
To arrive at these results, the researchers split a group of 10-year-old children into four groups. The first two groups engaged in a seven-week Nintendo DS memory course, while the third group engaged in puzzles using pencil-and-paper. The final group, the control group, went to school as usual. All of the subjects groups took logic tests at the beginning and end of the experiment.
As it turned out, the DS group only showed a slight increase in math in comparison and a significant decrease in memorization. Not the best results for a game that is supposed to promote sharp memorization and intelligence improvements.
In speaking with Times-Online, Alain Lieury, the professor of cognitive psychology at the University of Rennes, said:
As someone who owns Big Brain Academy, I seriously disagree with his results.
Read [Times-Online] Via [Kotaku]
Keep up with the latest gaming goodness! -
Subscribe to our feed