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Cognitive Self Testing

Posted: Wed May 28, 2014 4:52 pm
by Ski
Below are some of the better online free test sites I found. Some may require entering registration information but all of them you can use dummy names/email addresses etc. as they don’t require activating from your email or anything. I hope you find these useful.

https://www.cnsvs.com - This one requires downloading software, but the most thorough of them all. You can try out the software here which does 2 of the tests...http://www.brainfitnesscentersofflorida ... enu-item-7
http://gocognitive.net/demos
http://cft.foodforthebrain.org/
http://www.cambridgebrainsciences.com/
http://www.memorylossonline.com/learnin ... ames1.html
https://www.mindcrowd.org/

Re: Cognitive Self Testing

Posted: Wed Aug 27, 2014 11:27 am
by Tincup
Self testing and diet/lifestyle. https://www.bulletproofexec.com/remove-toxins/
Toxins can be from food (wheat, legumes, etc.), the air, water, mold, clothing, or for some, even your cell phone. I won’t be able to cover every possible toxin in this article, but I’ll show you how to identify and remove the most common and damaging.

One of the first ways I started biohacking was with a game called FreeCell. This is a simple online game you can play where you match squares. I played the game for several weeks to establish a baseline, then I started testing. I was looking for a way to track how certain foods effected my brain function. A few weeks of trial and error revealed that two days after eating wheat – my score dropped significantly.

I soon moved on to more advanced ways of tracking my mental performance, but this was a great start. After I eliminated numerous food toxins like wheat, legumes, and aspartame, I still felt there was something wrong....

Re: Cognitive Self Testing

Posted: Sat Oct 04, 2014 10:47 am
by Tincup
In Dr. Bredesen work http://www.impactaging.com/papers/v6/n9 ... 00690.html, noticed the program MemTrax http://memtrax.com/ was used for testing.

Code: Select all

Table 2
Patient 	History,           evaluation 	       Diagnosis 	Status
70M 4/3 	4yr memory ⇓; NPsych+, failed MemTrax 	AD 	Improved; MemTrax passed

Re: Cognitive Self Testing

Posted: Sat Oct 04, 2014 11:02 am
by circular
Jeepers, over $40/year? They need a one-time shot fee for those of us who might do it once a year. I screwed up the first time. I was expecting the repeat image to immediately follow the one it's repeating. What they mean in the instructions is the image will repeat *sometime* during the test. So once I figured that out and reset it, a couple times I couldn't recall which test I'd seen an image in, the first botched one, or the second on in process. So under those not so ideal circumstances I got a 94% with mean reaction time of 1.22 seconds. $40 to find out what it means, but I guess on the surface I'm okay for now!

Re: Cognitive Self Testing

Posted: Sat Oct 04, 2014 1:44 pm
by Welcomeaboard
92 percent 84 seconds, whatever that means

Re: Cognitive Self Testing

Posted: Sat Oct 04, 2014 1:56 pm
by Welcomeaboard
Might have disqualified myself for a trip to Californ I a granny.

Re: Cognitive Self Testing

Posted: Sat Oct 04, 2014 6:43 pm
by Tincup
You can read the poster linked here for more data, but don't do it before you take the test http://memtrax.com/memtrax-presenting-a ... -stanford/

If you screwed up, come back in a few days and retake. I had 90 & 93%. Didn't pay attention to the reaction time number (but should have).

Re: Cognitive Self Testing

Posted: Fri Jul 03, 2015 1:55 pm
by Rob
Percent Correct:
98%
Mean Reaction Time:
0.739 seconds
It's all down hill from here ;)

Re: Cognitive Self Testing

Posted: Fri Jul 03, 2015 7:40 pm
by Julie G
Woo hoo, Rob- cognitively intact and BRAVE too. Welcome! I'm too afraid to check :roll:

Re: Cognitive Self Testing

Posted: Sat Jul 04, 2015 2:32 pm
by circular
98%, mean reaction time 1.026 seconds, so Rob's above me on the leaderboard. Had to keep my cool right after I knew I flubbed one!

I think you'd do fine Juliegee. This doesn't seem like a very advanced test at all. It's all visual too. I wonder if it has a favorable bias towards visual learners. If it was remember the same set of four numbers I'd have done much worse.