Do you believe in brain training? A questionnaire about expectations of computerised cognitive training

•People tend to have high baseline expectations of brain training.•Expectations of brain training appear to be modifiable using simple, yet direct, messages.•Compared to young adults, older adults report greater optimism regarding brain training.•Individual characteristics may influence expectations...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inBehavioural brain research Vol. 295; pp. 64 - 70
Main Authors Rabipour, Sheida, Davidson, Patrick S.R.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 15.12.2015
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Summary:•People tend to have high baseline expectations of brain training.•Expectations of brain training appear to be modifiable using simple, yet direct, messages.•Compared to young adults, older adults report greater optimism regarding brain training.•Individual characteristics may influence expectations of brain training. “Brain training” (i.e., enhancing, rehabilitating, or simply maintaining cognitive function through deliberate cognitive exercise) is growing rapidly in popularity, yet remains highly controversial. Among the greatest problems in current research is the lack of a measure of participants’ expectations, which can influence the degree to which they improve over training (i.e., the placebo effect). Here we created a questionnaire to measure the perceived effectiveness of brain-training software. Given the growth in advertising of these programmes, we sought to determine whether even a brief positive (or negative) message about brain training would increase (or decrease) the reported optimism of participants. We measured participants’ expectations at baseline, and then following exposure to separate, brief messages that such programmes have either high or low effectiveness. Based on the knowledge they have gleaned from advertising and other real-world sources, people are relatively optimistic about brain training. However, brief messages can influence reported expectations about brain-training results: Reading a brief positive message can increase reported optimism, whereas reading a brief negative message can decrease it. Older adults appear more optimistic about brain training than young adults, especially when they report being knowledgeable about brain training and computers. These data indicate that perceptions of brain training are malleable to at least some extent, and may vary depending on age and other factors. Our questionnaire can serve as a simple, easily-incorporated tool to assess the face validity of brain training interventions and to create a covariate to account for expectations in statistical analyses.
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ISSN:0166-4328
1872-7549
DOI:10.1016/j.bbr.2015.01.002