GET for the brain.![]()
Sort of. Except they're not talking about ramping up the cognitive exercises over time, are they? So maybe it's more "exercise for the brain" regardless of symptoms?
GET for the brain.![]()
But it's literally not. This nonsense is widely believed, including by people who dismiss all the biological evidence for ME/CFS and will gleefully point out how it contradicts some of the things they know about biology, and then they literally go "brain matter is just like muscle matter" when it's freaking not! This is not some minor detail.The underlying theory is that "the brain is a muscle – you train it, it gets better, it gets stronger, and more resilient," said Corbett.
https://www.medscape.co.uk/viewarticle/can-brain-training-ease-mental-fog-long-covid-2024a10006zx
"One popular approach is "brain trfaining.""Interesting article from Medscape on brain training:
https://www.medscape.com/viewarticl...240522_etid6535759&uac=264294PY&impID=6535759
You will never find a better example of "when a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a good measure". Of course if you train people to play the yo-yo every day for years they will be better at playing yo-yo. And who cares?A 2016 review found that brain-training interventions do improve performance on specific trained tasks