Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Virtual game can detect mild cognitive impairment

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Jan, 2015 10:55 AM
  • Virtual game can detect mild cognitive impairment
A team of Greek researchers has shown the potential of a virtual reality brain training game as a screening tool for patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI).
 
MCI is a condition that often predates Alzheimer's disease and is characterised by memory loss and inability to execute complex activities such as financial planning.
 
Scientists from the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (AUTH), the Greek Association of Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders (GAADRD) and the Centre for Research and Technology Hellas/Information Technologies Institute (CERTH/ITI) succeeded in MCI screening via robust virtual reality game applications that can be used on their own for accurate MCI detection.
 
The researchers indicated that the virtual supermarket (VSM) game displayed a correct classification rate (CCR) of 87.30 percent - achieving a level of diagnostic accuracy similar to standardized neuropsychological tests which are the gold standard for MCI screening.
 
A large number of older adults use computerised cognitive training exercises and games as an easy and enjoyable means of exercising their brain.
 
"If these games and exercises can also detect cognitive disorders, the whole cognitive screening process could become more pleasurable, thus motivating more people to be evaluated," the authors noted.
 
The use of the VSM as a robust screening test could have profound implications for the diagnosis and treatment of MCI, the most important of which is the possibility for automated remote MCI screening.
 
"The performance of older adults playing such a game at home could be monitored and an algorithm embedded in the game could inform them when their performance suggests possible cognitive impairment due to MCI, prompting them to visit an appropriate health service," they emphasised.
 
Such a system would have the ability to screen the majority of older adults effectively while, at the same time, minimising examination costs, concluded the authors in a paper appeared in the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Useful blood gene variants spread in humans worldwide

Useful blood gene variants spread in humans worldwide
Two beneficial variants of a gene controlling red blood cells development have spread from Africa into nearly all human populations across the globe, a study reveals....

Useful blood gene variants spread in humans worldwide

New genetic risk factors for Parkinson's discovered

New genetic risk factors for Parkinson's discovered
In what could lead to new treatment for Parkinson's disease, scientists have identified 24 genetic risk factors involved in the disease, including six that had not...

New genetic risk factors for Parkinson's discovered

Shift work can worsen asthma, pneumonia

Shift work can worsen asthma, pneumonia
A research has found that drugs widely used to treat lung diseases like asthma or pneumonia work better with the body clock....

Shift work can worsen asthma, pneumonia

Healthy lifestyle key for childhood cancer survivors

Healthy lifestyle key for childhood cancer survivors
Following a healthy lifestyle may lower childhood cancer survivors' risk of developing the metabolic syndrome, says a study....

Healthy lifestyle key for childhood cancer survivors

ECG, blood test must for chest pain sufferers: Study

ECG, blood test must for chest pain sufferers: Study
Suffering from chest pain? Do not take it lightly for indigestion or gas pain. Better get an electrocardiogram (ECG) and blood test done to rule out the worst and avoid hospitalisation....

ECG, blood test must for chest pain sufferers: Study

Forget injection, pills to cure hardest-to-treat hepatitis C

Forget injection, pills to cure hardest-to-treat hepatitis C
On this World Hepatitis Day, there's good news for patients, particularly from India, for those suffering from hepatitis C....

Forget injection, pills to cure hardest-to-treat hepatitis C