Computer-based Cognitive Rehabilitation Program for Healthy Older Adults, Older People With Mild Cognitive Impairment and Mild Dementia
Mild Cognitive Impairment, Mild Dementia, Healthy Older Adults
About this trial
This is an interventional prevention trial for Mild Cognitive Impairment focused on measuring memory encoding, functional performance
Eligibility Criteria
Selection Criteria for healthy older adults:
- Score greater than 24 on the Mini-Mental State Examination, 2nd edition, standard version (MMSE)
- Score less than 5 on the 15-item Geriatric Depression Scale - Short Form (GDS)
- No diagnosis of probable dementia (as per NINCDS-ADRDA Alzheimer's Criteria); and
- Are able to provide voluntary consent to participate in the study.
Selection Criteria for people with MCI:
- No diagnosis of probable dementia (as per NINCDS-ADRDA Alzheimer's Criteria);
- Have a Clinical Dementia Rating Score (CDR) of 0 indicating no dementia;
- Meets the diagnostic criteria for MCI (Petersen, 2004); and
- Are able to provide voluntary consent to participate in the study.
Selection Criteria for people with mild dementia:
- Have a diagnosis of probable dementia;
- Have a CDR score of 1 indicating mild dementia;
- Have a career or family members who are able to report functional performance; and
- Are able to provide voluntary consent to participate in the study, or have a guardian to provide consent.
Sites / Locations
- Western Sydney University
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm 3
Experimental
Experimental
Active Comparator
Perceptual-based memory encoding
Semantic-based memory encoding
Cognitive stimulation
It will involve the use of visual imagery and the method of loci. To achieve this, each of the 15 daily tasks will be filmed and a short video created. In addition, each task will be broken down into 5-6 photographed steps based on activity analysis and task breakdown. The program will prompt the user to indicate in which room of the house the task would usually be completed. Once correct location is identified, the program will prompt the user to watch a chosen daily task video and then visualise themselves completing the task in their home environment.
It will incorporate association-based strategies to assist with recalling the steps of daily tasks. The steps of a given daily task will be provided and the user will be prompted to link the steps using a honeycomb concept, which makes use of the chunking method to encode the sequenced steps. Following this, the program will prompt the user to categorise the steps according to their association with given words cues. The word cues will represent time, places, objects, and people. The program will then take the user response and form a verbal and visual story according to the responses given. The program will help identify any problems in the sequencing and prompt the user to re-categorise if required.
Participants will complete an online cognitive exercise program, Lumosity (Sarkar, Scanlon, & Drescher, 2007). A study conducted by Hardy, Drescher, Sarkar, Kellett, and Scanlon (2011) indicated that participants who engaged in Lumosity showed greater improvements in memory in comparison to a non-intervention control group.