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Category — Brain Training Puzzles

Exciting Sudoku Challenges for the Latest in the Brain Age Series

December 21, 2009 BY

Sudoku Brain Training

For the ultimate Sudoku gaming experience on the Nintendo DS, Brain Age Express: Sudoku will be perfectly suited to any level of puzzle-solving fanatic. There will be no better way to give your brain a better work out. With this popular release from the Brain Age series, you will be able to track your progress after completing three tests, when you can then discover your ‘Brain Age’.

This interactive Sudoku game will be the ideal gift for any Nintendo DS fans and is certain to get newcomers hooked. Via the Touch Screen and intuitive interface a range of different puzzles will be right at your fingertips. Never has brain boosting been so much fun!

Image Source: Google Images

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More Brain Training on the Nintendo DS – To Help You Feel Young Again

December 8, 2009 BY

More Brain Training Nintendo DS

The latest edition of the ever popular Dr Kawashima’s Brain Training for the Nintendo DS has added even more cunning puzzles and games that are sure to test your mental fitness.

Of course, all the old classics are still included, and there is also a handy feature that charts your progress as you go. If you feel that you are not as sharp as you used to be, ‘More Brain Training’ will be the perfect way to get you up and running again.

From composing piano pieces to solving mathematical equations and conundrums there is plenty of variety to keep everyone entertained and you are sure to reap the benefits of a quick mind in no time.

Image Source: Google Images

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Improving brain power the fun way

November 5, 2009 BY

The aging process of a person does not just affect the body; it also does lasting damage to the mind. The brain suffers damage through aging just like every other organ and loses its efficiency as a person grows older. This damage cannot be cured, but it can be inhibited to some extent by doing some workout for the grey matter. Solving brain training puzzles is one such workout.

Brain training puzzles are not necessarily sections of a picture, which have to be rearranged to form the complete one. Some of the puzzles can be as simple as a linear sequence of numbers having a hidden pattern between those. The sequence can be completed by identifying the pattern. There can be puzzles that are nothing but anagrams of well known words. These can be solved by finding the actual word(s) from the anagram. There are also puzzles that put the player’s mathematical skills to the test. Overall, there is no dearth of variations to this type of puzzles, which ensures that the player will never get bored with those.

There are several websites that provide lots of puzzles for players to crunch through. One such website is braintrainingpuzzle.co.uk, which has large collections available for visitors, free of cost.

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Lego can improve brain functions in older people

October 20, 2009 BY

It is no secret that kids love to play with Lego. However, it was not known before that Lego can help the brains of older people work better. Recently, research has shown that playing for an hour or two with Lego can indeed help older people fight off the degeneration of the brain brought about by old age, and the corresponding natural aging process.

As people play with Lego, they have to work their gray and white matter more than usual. This in turn makes their brains work better by tuning up the synapses, i.e. neural endings. So, next time your father joins your kids in a game of Lego, encourage him to stick to it for a while. He may be unknowingly putting up his best fight against age related ailments like dementia and Alzheimer’s disease.

Check Amazon for Lego

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Riddles help improve brain functions

October 19, 2009 BY

The brain stays in better condition when it is made to work hard. It is known now that brain training, especially with the help of brainteasers, helps keep your neural network in good condition and stave off age related ailments like dementia and Alzheimer’s disease.

Word puzzles are considered to be one of the best ways of exercising the neurons and reviving the ones that have dried up from disuse. Riddles that require moderate to hard brainstorming are one of the best ways to exercise the thinking muscles. Solving hard riddles tests the vocabulary skills of the individual. This forces the brain to work hard, rushing through collections of words in the user’s mind, thus stimulating the neurons that may have been left disused to work again. Prolonged exercises like this can indeed boost brain health, staving off diseases like Alzheimer’s and dementia.

This kind of workout improves the condition of the gray and white matter considerably. These sections of the brain absorb more proteins and consequently, regenerate the damage these sustain from normal aging process in a much better manner.

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Train your brain the fun way

October 16, 2009 BY

It is now known that training the brain regularly is a sure shot way of keeping it healthy all the way to a ripe old age. Training your brain helps the neural connections work properly, and also reconnects broken neural junctions. That’s right. As you grow older, many of your unused neural connections may dry up. There are ways to breathe new life back into these connections, or synapses, as they are called. Exercising your brain is one of the best ways of doing so.

Playing puzzle games is a great way of exercising the idle connections in your brain tissue. As you solve challenging puzzles, your brain demands more and more processing power from the idle connections, thereby forcing those to reconnect and absorb nutrition. As the synapses absorb nutrition, those grow stronger, and remain healthy.

Brainarena.com has excellent puzzle games that help to train your brain in a fun way. The games are easy to understand, and quite engaging. Try out titles like Triangle numbers, Smiley twins, Grid numbers, and Rock, paper, and scissors.  Just play these for about half an hour every day, if possible. You will not be disappointed.

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I Spy puzzle books: Brain training for little kids

October 15, 2009 BY

Encouraging restless kids to do brain training can seem like quite a nightmare at times. However, with the right tools, this task can be easier than ever. Puzzle books are one such tool. The pictures, usually colored in bright hues, capture the attention of kids from the word go. All that remains to be done is to introduce them to the intriguing puzzles. With a little encouragement, kids can spend hours trying to solve the mind-boggling puzzles, giving their little brains a good workout in the process. Not only do these puzzles help in development of good visual acuity, these also help the kids build up proper logical reasoning skills at an early age.

I Spy puzzle books from Scholastic Inc. feature high quality photographs snapped by Walter Wick, with pictures of a number of objects hidden inside each photograph. The objective for the user is to find all of the objects. The puzzles are quite addictive, and care should be taken to ensure that the little kids don’t end up wasting time for study or other, more physically demanding sports. The board bound books of the I Spy puzzle books series are geared towards children of ages 4 and up. With a budget price, the series is quite a good buy.

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Tease your brain to good health

October 15, 2009 BY

Research has revealed that solving brainteaser puzzles on a regular basis keeps the neural network in good health. The puzzles make the neurons work harder than usual, and as a result those absorb more protein from food. This in turn makes the neurons strong and resistant to the natural aging process. It is like a workout session, for the brain.

Brainteasers are available quite easily on the internet. About .com has a great section of optical illusion puzzles that anyone can try to solve. There are optical illusions, ambigrams (images that when turned upside down show a different image), spot the difference challenges, and much more. These puzzles do better then simply teasing the brain; these also help to maintain good visual acuity all the way to a ripe old age. That, coupled with the benefit of maintaining sense of logical reasoning, makes these puzzles perfect for people of all ages.

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Brain Age 2: Have fun training your brain

October 15, 2009 BY

As a person grows older, his brain also gradually loses its power to work efficiently. Math calculations take longer to finish, and ideas are forgotten before those can develop into something more organized. However, this deterioration of brain capacity can be prevented, at least to some extent, by keeping the brain active. There are so many ways of accomplishing these, but playing puzzle games appears to be one of the best.

Brain Age 2 for Nintendo DS console is a fun collection of puzzle games designed specifically to give specific neuron groups a good workout. It comprises numerical, musical, and alphabetical puzzles that helped the player exercise the abilities of his brain. The game features challenging mathematical puzzles in the form of everyday activities, like calculating spare change after a purchase at a grocery store. Also added is Sudoku, one of the most popular mathematical puzzles in the world.

There are also musical puzzles, where the player has to recognize the note being played. It even allows the user to take challenge the computer in an intriguing game of rock, paper and scissors. This title seems to be a perfect addition to the game collections of people who wish to keep their brains healthy for those later years of life.

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