Torkel Klingberg is a professor of cognitive neuroscience at theKarolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden.[1] He is the author of two books in Swedish, translated into English by Neil Betteridge, namelyThe Overflowing Brain: Information Overload and the Limits of Working Memory[2] andThe Learning Brain: Memory and Brain Development in Children.[3] His research testing the hypothesis that playing memory games such asN-back also improves broader skills is controversial.[4][5] He was one of the founders ofCogmed, but has currently no financial relationships with the company.[1] He is executive director of Cognition Matters, a project that provides free digital cognitive training tools for children worldwide.[6]
...one of the founders the company Cogmed, but has currently no financial relationships with Cogmed.
After just five weeks, Klingberg found that ... they also scored higher on one of the single best measures of fluid intelligence, the Raven's Progressive Matrices.
A pair of scientists in Europe recently gathered all of the best research... The conclusion: the games may yield improvements in the narrow task being trained, but this does not transfer to broader skills...
Executive Director: Torkel Klingberg
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