Aging: Smart Guys and Dolls
Seniors keep their minds sharp by taking the stage, engaging their brains physically and emotionally without the deck of cards.
By Elizabeth Svoboda published July 1, 2004 - last reviewed on June 9, 2016
Simple games like bingo are standard fare for the elderly who want
to pass the time. But seniors who want to keep their minds sharp should
consider ditching the cards and taking the stage instead.
Helga Noice, a cognitive psychologist at Elmhurst College in
Illinois, enrolled a group of aging adults in four weeks of theater
classes. After the course, the amateur actors scored 18 percent better on
a word-recall test and 55 percent better on a problem-solving test than
they had at the outset.
Noice speculates that acting engages the brain’s verbal,
physical and emotional capacities in a way few other activities
do.