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Rote learning improves memory in older adults, new research shows

 


The positioning of the region of interest in the brain - over the left posterior hippocampus

The positioning of the region of interest in the brain - over the left posterior hippocampus

Memory loss - it can be as trivial as misplacing the car keys but, as we get older, we all experience lapses more frequently and find it more difficult to learn new things.

Some 40% of people over 60 years of age have some kind of memory difficulty. Mild, age-related memory loss is caused by the loss of brain cells over time, along with changes in brain chemistry.

So, along with a brisk walk by the sea or that stretch and sculpt class in the gym, older adults would do well to dust off that old copy of J Alfred Prufrock and exercise the mind, along with the body.

Jonathan McNulty, Diagnostic Imaging, UCD School of Medicine and Medical Science presenting the research at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) in Chicago (© 2006 RSNA)

Jonathan McNulty, Diagnostic Imaging, UCD School of Medicine and Medical Science presenting the research at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) in Chicago (© 2006 RSNA)

Now, researchers in Ireland have discovered that taking memory exercises - in the form of rote learning of poems, articles or other materials can help combat memory loss. Jonathan McNulty, Diagnostic Imaging, UCD School of Medicine and Medical Science, has managed to identify changes in brain chemistry that show improvements in memory and verbal recall among volunteers who took part in the research.

The research, funded by the Higher Education Authority (HEA) Research Programme for Research in Third Level Institutions (PRTLI), studied how repeated cognitive exercise impacts memory and recall, as well as the health of brain cells involved in memory.

The volunteers were 24 healthy older adults aged between 55 and 70. They underwent six weeks of intensive rote learning, memorising a newspaper article or poem of 500 words, followed by six weeks of rest.

"We didn't see an immediate improvement after the intensive memorisation period. But following a six-week rest period, the volunteers manifested both metabolic changes in the brain and improved memory performance," explains Jonathan McNulty. "Unlike other studies on memory involving specific training regimes, memorising is an everyday activity that anyone can undertake," said co-author Dr Richard Roche from the Department of Psychology at National University of Ireland in Maynooth. "The brain is like a muscle that should be exercised through the retirement years as a defence against dementia, cognitive lapses and memory failure."

The research findings are expected to spark interest among others working in the area throughout the world.

Co-authors of the report include: P Brennan, C Doherty, D McMackin, S Sukumaran, IH Robertson, MA Mangaoang, SM O'Mara, S Mullally, J Hayden, J Prendergast, and M Fitzsimons.