Of course some research says that brain training does not work to be followed by the ones that disagree. Which way does your doctor fall? Sounds like you are going to have to do this on your own. Be careful out there, this could be dangerous.
http://sharpbrains.com/solving-the-brain-fitness-puzzle-is-the-key-to-self-empowered-aging/
As the concept of brain fitness (or, the brain’s ability to
function efficiently and effectively in personal and professional
life) goes mainstream, the proliferation of scientific findings,
media reports, and commercial claims is generating much noise and
confusion. Knowing what to believe and what to do presents a
real-life puzzle, leading many people to either inaction or toward a
focus on the wrong priorities.
This past October, sixty-nine scientists, convened by the
Stanford Center on Longevity, released an announcement stating that
there is a scientific consensus that brain training does not work
(Allaire et al., 2014). By December, 127 scientists worldwide had
signed another statement, challenging the previous “consensus”
and supporting the value of brain training (Alescio-Lautier et
al., 2014).
The problem here is not seeing the forest for the trees.
Eighty-three percent of more than 3,000 early adopters surveyed by the
independent market research firm SharpBrains (which I co-founded)
agreed that “adults of all ages should take charge of their own brain
fitness, without waiting for their doctors to tell them to”
(Fernandez et al., 2013). When we conducted in-depth focus groups and
interviews with respondents, the main question many had was not what
has perfect science behind, but what has better science than the
other things people are doing—solving crossword puzzle number one
million and one, taking ‘brain supplements,’ or doing nothing at
all until depression or dementia hits home.
And the unequivocal answer to that question, based upon the most
authoritative systematic reviews of the evidence conducted to
date (The Government Office for Science, 2008; AHRQ, 2010), is a
resounding yes—one thing does work better than most common alternatives. The challenge is that “thing” is different for everyone.
More at link.
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