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The largest human cognitive performance dataset reveals insights into the effects of lifestyle factors and aging.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Sternberg, DA; Ballard, K; Hardy, JL; Katz, B; Doraiswamy, PM; Scanlon, M
Published in: Front Hum Neurosci
2013

Making new breakthroughs in understanding the processes underlying human cognition may depend on the availability of very large datasets that have not historically existed in psychology and neuroscience. Lumosity is a web-based cognitive training platform that has grown to include over 600 million cognitive training task results from over 35 million individuals, comprising the largest existing dataset of human cognitive performance. As part of the Human Cognition Project, Lumosity's collaborative research program to understand the human mind, Lumos Labs researchers and external research collaborators have begun to explore this dataset in order uncover novel insights about the correlates of cognitive performance. This paper presents two preliminary demonstrations of some of the kinds of questions that can be examined with the dataset. The first example focuses on replicating known findings relating lifestyle factors to baseline cognitive performance in a demographically diverse, healthy population at a much larger scale than has previously been available. The second example examines a question that would likely be very difficult to study in laboratory-based and existing online experimental research approaches at a large scale: specifically, how learning ability for different types of cognitive tasks changes with age. We hope that these examples will provoke the imagination of researchers who are interested in collaborating to answer fundamental questions about human cognitive performance.

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Published In

Front Hum Neurosci

DOI

ISSN

1662-5161

Publication Date

2013

Volume

7

Start / End Page

292

Location

Switzerland

Related Subject Headings

  • Experimental Psychology
  • 5204 Cognitive and computational psychology
  • 5202 Biological psychology
  • 3209 Neurosciences
  • 1702 Cognitive Sciences
  • 1701 Psychology
  • 1109 Neurosciences
 

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Sternberg, D. A., Ballard, K., Hardy, J. L., Katz, B., Doraiswamy, P. M., & Scanlon, M. (2013). The largest human cognitive performance dataset reveals insights into the effects of lifestyle factors and aging. Front Hum Neurosci, 7, 292. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2013.00292
Sternberg, Daniel A., Kacey Ballard, Joseph L. Hardy, Benjamin Katz, P Murali Doraiswamy, and Michael Scanlon. “The largest human cognitive performance dataset reveals insights into the effects of lifestyle factors and aging.Front Hum Neurosci 7 (2013): 292. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2013.00292.
Sternberg DA, Ballard K, Hardy JL, Katz B, Doraiswamy PM, Scanlon M. The largest human cognitive performance dataset reveals insights into the effects of lifestyle factors and aging. Front Hum Neurosci. 2013;7:292.
Sternberg, Daniel A., et al. “The largest human cognitive performance dataset reveals insights into the effects of lifestyle factors and aging.Front Hum Neurosci, vol. 7, 2013, p. 292. Pubmed, doi:10.3389/fnhum.2013.00292.
Sternberg DA, Ballard K, Hardy JL, Katz B, Doraiswamy PM, Scanlon M. The largest human cognitive performance dataset reveals insights into the effects of lifestyle factors and aging. Front Hum Neurosci. 2013;7:292.

Published In

Front Hum Neurosci

DOI

ISSN

1662-5161

Publication Date

2013

Volume

7

Start / End Page

292

Location

Switzerland

Related Subject Headings

  • Experimental Psychology
  • 5204 Cognitive and computational psychology
  • 5202 Biological psychology
  • 3209 Neurosciences
  • 1702 Cognitive Sciences
  • 1701 Psychology
  • 1109 Neurosciences