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Dive into the research topics where Henry W. Mahncke is active.

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Featured researches published by Henry W. Mahncke.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Memory enhancement in healthy older adults using a brain plasticity-based training program: a randomized, controlled study.

Henry W. Mahncke; Bonnie B. Connor; Jed Appelman; Omar N. Ahsanuddin; Joseph L. Hardy; Richard A. Wood; Nicholas M. Joyce; Tania Boniske; Sharona M. Atkins; Michael M. Merzenich

Normal aging is associated with progressive functional losses in perception, cognition, and memory. Although the root causes of age-related cognitive decline are incompletely understood, psychophysical and neuropsychological evidence suggests that a significant contribution stems from poorer signal-to-noise conditions and down-regulated neuromodulatory system function in older brains. Because the brain retains a lifelong capacity for plasticity and adaptive reorganization, dimensions of negative reorganization should be at least partially reversible through the use of an appropriately designed training program. We report here results from such a training program targeting age-related cognitive decline. Data from a randomized, controlled trial using standardized measures of neuropsychological function as outcomes are presented. Significant improvements in assessments directly related to the training tasks and significant generalization of improvements to nonrelated standardized neuropsychological measures of memory (effect size of 0.25) were documented in the group using the training program. Memory enhancement appeared to be sustained after a 3-month no-contact follow-up period. Matched active control and no-contact control groups showed no significant change in memory function after training or at the 3-month follow-up. This study demonstrates that intensive, plasticity-engaging training can result in an enhancement of cognitive function in normal mature adults.


Progress in Brain Research | 2006

Brain plasticity and functional losses in the aged: scientific bases for a novel intervention.

Henry W. Mahncke; Amy Bronstone; Michael M. Merzenich

Aging is associated with progressive losses in function across multiple systems, including sensation, cognition, memory, motor control, and affect. The traditional view has been that functional decline in aging is unavoidable because it is a direct consequence of brain machinery wearing down over time. In recent years, an alternative perspective has emerged, which elaborates on this traditional view of age-related functional decline. This new viewpoint--based upon decades of research in neuroscience, experimental psychology, and other related fields--argues that as people age, brain plasticity processes with negative consequences begin to dominate brain functioning. Four core factors--reduced schedules of brain activity, noisy processing, weakened neuromodulatory control, and negative learning--interact to create a self-reinforcing downward spiral of degraded brain function in older adults. This downward spiral might begin from reduced brain activity due to behavioral change, from a loss in brain function driven by aging brain machinery, or more likely from both. In aggregate, these interrelated factors promote plastic changes in the brain that result in age-related functional decline. This new viewpoint on the root causes of functional decline immediately suggests a remedial approach. Studies of adult brain plasticity have shown that substantial improvement in function and/or recovery from losses in sensation, cognition, memory, motor control, and affect should be possible, using appropriately designed behavioral training paradigms. Driving brain plasticity with positive outcomes requires engaging older adults in demanding sensory, cognitive, and motor activities on an intensive basis, in a behavioral context designed to re-engage and strengthen the neuromodulatory systems that control learning in adults, with the goal of increasing the fidelity, reliability, and power of cortical representations. Such a training program would serve a substantial unmet need in aging adults. Current treatments directed at age-related functional losses are limited in important ways. Pharmacological therapies can target only a limited number of the many changes believed to underlie functional decline. Behavioral approaches focus on teaching specific strategies to aid higher order cognitive functions, and do not usually aspire to fundamentally change brain function. A brain-plasticity-based training program would potentially be applicable to all aging adults with the promise of improving their operational capabilities. We have constructed such a brain-plasticity-based training program and conducted an initial randomized controlled pilot study to evaluate the feasibility of its use by older adults. A main objective of this initial study was to estimate the effect size on standardized neuropsychological measures of memory. We found that older adults could learn the training program quickly, and could use it entirely unsupervised for the majority of the time required. Pre- and posttesting documented a significant improvement in memory within the training group (effect size 0.41, p<0.0005), with no significant within-group changes in a time-matched computer using active control group, or in a no-contact control group. Thus, a brain-plasticity-based intervention targeting normal age-related cognitive decline may potentially offer benefit to a broad population of older adults.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Speech comprehension is correlated with temporal response patterns recorded from auditory cortex

Ehud Ahissar; Srikantan S. Nagarajan; Merav Ahissar; Athanassios Protopapas; Henry W. Mahncke; Michael M. Merzenich

Speech comprehension depends on the integrity of both the spectral content and temporal envelope of the speech signal. Although neural processing underlying spectral analysis has been intensively studied, less is known about the processing of temporal information. Most of speech information conveyed by the temporal envelope is confined to frequencies below 16 Hz, frequencies that roughly match spontaneous and evoked modulation rates of primary auditory cortex neurons. To test the importance of cortical modulation rates for speech processing, we manipulated the frequency of the temporal envelope of speech sentences and tested the effect on both speech comprehension and cortical activity. Magnetoencephalographic signals from the auditory cortices of human subjects were recorded while they were performing a speech comprehension task. The test sentences used in this task were compressed in time. Speech comprehension was degraded when sentence stimuli were presented in more rapid (more compressed) forms. We found that the average comprehension level, at each compression, correlated with (i) the similarity between the frequencies of the temporal envelopes of the stimulus and the subjects cortical activity (“stimulus-cortex frequency-matching”) and (ii) the phase-locking (PL) between the two temporal envelopes (“stimulus-cortex PL”). Of these two correlates, PL was significantly more indicative for single-trial success. Our results suggest that the match between the speech rate and the a priori modulation capacities of the auditory cortex is a prerequisite for comprehension. However, this is not sufficient: stimulus-cortex PL should be achieved during actual sentence presentation.


PLOS ONE | 2010

The Influence of Perceptual Training on Working Memory in Older Adults

Anne S. Berry; Theodore P. Zanto; Wesley C. Clapp; Joseph L. Hardy; Peter B. Delahunt; Henry W. Mahncke; Adam Gazzaley

Normal aging is associated with a degradation of perceptual abilities and a decline in higher-level cognitive functions, notably working memory. To remediate age-related deficits, cognitive training programs are increasingly being developed. However, it is not yet definitively established if, and by what mechanisms, training ameliorates effects of cognitive aging. Furthermore, a major factor impeding the success of training programs is a frequent failure of training to transfer benefits to untrained abilities. Here, we offer the first evidence of direct transfer-of-benefits from perceptual discrimination training to working memory performance in older adults. Moreover, using electroencephalography to evaluate participants before and after training, we reveal neural evidence of functional plasticity in older adult brains, such that training-induced modifications in early visual processing during stimulus encoding predict working memory accuracy improvements. These findings demonstrate the strength of the perceptual discrimination training approach by offering clear psychophysical evidence of transfer-of-benefit and a neural mechanism underlying cognitive improvement.


international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 1997

Spatio-temporal interaction of evoked magnetic fields in primary auditory and somatosensory cortex of awake humans

Srikantan S. Nagarajan; Henry W. Mahncke; David Poeppel; T. P. Roberts; Howard A. Rowley; Michael M. Merzenich

Determines the primary cortical evoked magnetic field responses to brief somatosensory and auditory stimuli in awake humans. These responses comprise evoked coherent low-frequency oscillations in the range of 4-15 Hz lasting for 100-300 ms. Responses to pairs of stimuli occurring at various inter-stimulus intervals interact non-linearly. Latencies between the peaks of the evoked response were linearly related to the intervals between stimuli, reflecting the high-fidelity representation of stimulus intervals in both primary cortical areas. The sources of the different cycles of these oscillations and the sources of responses to stimulus pairs both localize to the same cortical area, indicating that the observed responses reflect changes in underlying cortical excitability. The potential origins and functional role of these oscillations in the processing and representation of temporal information on this time scale are discussed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1999

Cortical auditory signal processing in poor readers

Srikantan S. Nagarajan; Henry W. Mahncke; Talya Salz; Paula Tallal; Timothy P.L. Roberts; Michael M. Merzenich


The Journal of Neuroscience | 1997

Learning and Generalization of Auditory Temporal–Interval Discrimination in Humans

Beverly A. Wright; Dean V. Buonomano; Henry W. Mahncke; Michael M. Merzenich


Archive | 2006

Cognitive training using visual stimuli

Sharona M. Atkins; Dylan Bird; Samuel C. Chan; Peter B. Delahunt; Shruti Gangadhar; Joseph L. Hardy; Stephen G. Lisberger; Henry W. Mahncke; Michael M. Merzenich; Donald Richards


Archive | 2006

Assessment in cognitive training exercises

Samuel Chungchi Chan; Joseph L. Hardy; Henry W. Mahncke


Archive | 2005

Method for enhancing memory and cognition in aging adults

Daniel M. Goldman; Joseph L. Hardy; Henry W. Mahncke; Michael M. Merzenich; Jeffrey S. Zimman

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Adam Gazzaley

University of California

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Anne S. Berry

University of California

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Daniel L. Roenker

Western Kentucky University

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