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    cognitive training

    Explore " cognitive training" with insightful episodes like "312 - Prevention & Intervention Strategies for Alzheimer's Disease: August 2022", "Autism Gaming and Attention with Leanne Chukoskie - Autism Tree Global Neuroscience Conference 2022", "Autism Gaming and Attention with Leanne Chukoskie - Autism Tree Global Neuroscience Conference 2022", "Trainfuly // Golf Fitness - Episode #22 - Dr. Dustin Grooms - Training the Brain to Enhance Motor Control" and "275 - Prevention and Intervention Strategies for Alzheimer's Disease: February 2022" from podcasts like ""AMiNDR: A Month in Neurodegenerative Disease Research", "Autism (Video)", "Autism (Audio)", "Trainfuly Golf Performance Podcast" and "AMiNDR: A Month in Neurodegenerative Disease Research"" and more!

    Episodes (7)

    312 - Prevention & Intervention Strategies for Alzheimer's Disease: August 2022

    312 - Prevention & Intervention Strategies for Alzheimer's Disease: August 2022

    We have one last episode for you to wrap up 2022! In this episode, Naila will guide you through 11 papers published in August 2022, covering a range of way researchers are working on preventing or treating aspects of Alzheimer's disease through non-pharmacological therapies. You'll hear about cognitive training tools, the effects of disrupting circadian rhythms on metabolism and Alzheimer's, and on vagal nerve stimulation for treating neuropsychiatric symptoms related to AD. You may also hear the occasional interjection from her needy cat. See you in 2023!  

    Sections in this episode:  

    Cognitive Training (2:10)  

    Exercise and Metabolism (10:07)  

    Neuromodulatory Techniques (20:35)  

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    To find the numbered bibliography with all the papers covered in this episode, click here, or use the link below:

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1reE8OKzrbAAjWNnK6gcLfzLipzTz5Xej/view?usp=sharing

    To access the folder with ALL our bibliographies, follow this link (it will be updated as we publish episodes and process bibliographies), or use the link below:

    https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1bzSzkY9ZHzzY8Xhzt0HZfZhRG1Gq_Si-?usp=sharing

    You can also find all of our bibliographies on our website: www.amindr.com

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    Follow-up on social media for more updates!

    Twitter: @AMiNDR_podcast

    Instagram: @AMiNDR.podcast

    Facebook:  AMiNDR  

    Youtube: AMiNDR Podcast

    LinkedIn: AMiNDR Podcast

    Email: amindrpodcast@gmail.com  

    -------------------------------------------------------------- 

    Please help us spread the word about AMiNDR to your friends, colleagues, and networks! And if you could leave us a rating and/or review on your streaming app of choice (Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to the podcast), that would be greatly appreciated! It helps us a lot and we thank you in advance for leaving a review! Don’t forget to subscribe to hear about new episodes as they come out too. 

    Thank you to our sponsor, the Canadian Consortium of Neurodegeneration in Aging, or CCNA, for their financial support of this podcast. This helps us to stay on the air and bring you high quality episodes. You can find out more about the CCNA on their website: https://ccna-ccnv.ca/

    Our team of volunteers works tirelessly each month to bring you every episode of AMiNDR. This episode was scripted and hosted by Naila Kuhlmann, edited by Isabelle Vaux, and reviewed by Judy Cheng and Anusha Kamesh. The bibliography was made by Sarah Louadi and the wordcloud was created by Lara Onbasi (www.wordart.com). 

    Big thanks to the sorting team for taking on the enormous task of sorting all of the Alzheimer’s Disease papers into episodes each month. For August 2022, the sorters were Sarah Louadi, Eden Dubchak, Ben Cornish, Christy Yu, Dana Clausen, Kevin Nishimura, Ellen Koch, and Elyn Rowe. Also, props to our management team, which includes Sarah Louadi, Ellen Koch, Naila Kuhlmann, Elyn Rowe, Anusha Kamesh, and Lara Onbasi for keeping everything running smoothly.

    Our music is from "Journey of a Neurotransmitter" by musician and fellow neuroscientist Anusha Kamesh; you can find the original piece and her other music on soundcloud under Anusha Kamesh or on her YouTube channel, AKMusic.   

    https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMH7chrAdtCUZuGia16FR4w   

    -------------------------------------------------------------- 

    If you are interested in joining the team, send us your CV by email. We are specifically looking for help with sorting abstracts by topic, abstract summaries and hosting, audio editing, creating bibliographies, and outreach/marketing. However, if you are interested in helping in other ways, don't hesitate to apply anyways.  

    --------------------------------------------------------------

    *About AMiNDR: *  

    Learn more about this project and the team behind it by listening to our first episode: "Welcome to AMiNDR!" 

    Autism Gaming and Attention with Leanne Chukoskie - Autism Tree Global Neuroscience Conference 2022

    Autism Gaming and Attention with Leanne Chukoskie - Autism Tree Global Neuroscience Conference 2022
    Leanne Chukoskie, Ph.D., Northeastern University, discusses her work using video games and play-based studies to learn more about autism and uncover potential therapies. Play-based relationships in early childhood are some of the primary tools that teach us where to look and find important information. Video games provide an excellent form of environmental learning by incorporating autonomy (user picks the game), purpose, mastery, uncertainty, competition, and peer reinforcement, and they’ve been linked to improvements in perception, visuo-spatial attention, movement skill, and memory. See how Chukoskie uses video games to study behavior, make assessments, and create interventions to help people with autism. Series: "Autism Tree Project Annual Neuroscience Conference" [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 38392]

    Autism Gaming and Attention with Leanne Chukoskie - Autism Tree Global Neuroscience Conference 2022

    Autism Gaming and Attention with Leanne Chukoskie - Autism Tree Global Neuroscience Conference 2022
    Leanne Chukoskie, Ph.D., Northeastern University, discusses her work using video games and play-based studies to learn more about autism and uncover potential therapies. Play-based relationships in early childhood are some of the primary tools that teach us where to look and find important information. Video games provide an excellent form of environmental learning by incorporating autonomy (user picks the game), purpose, mastery, uncertainty, competition, and peer reinforcement, and they’ve been linked to improvements in perception, visuo-spatial attention, movement skill, and memory. See how Chukoskie uses video games to study behavior, make assessments, and create interventions to help people with autism. Series: "Autism Tree Project Annual Neuroscience Conference" [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 38392]

    275 - Prevention and Intervention Strategies for Alzheimer's Disease: February 2022

    275 - Prevention and Intervention Strategies for Alzheimer's Disease: February 2022

    This month's episode covers a range of interventions and non-pharmacological treatments that could help prevent or live with AD. Naila will take you through the various mechanisms underlying the impact of different lifestyle interventions, the potential therapeutic effects of exercise, what mushroom consumption and ketogenic diets might have to offer, and plenty of other stimulating topics!  

    Sections in this episode:  

    Cognitive and Multidomain Interventions (1:35)  

    Diet (7:42)  

    Exercise (12:00)  

    Neuromodulatory Techniques (26:20) 

    -------------------------------------------------------------- 

    To find the numbered bibliography with all the papers covered in this episode, click here, or use the link below:

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1YGbSfhIAzZq66xlzHO0ZeYP5-9EXvKo6/view?usp=sharing

    To access the folder with ALL our bibliographies, follow this link (it will be updated as we publish episodes and process bibliographies), or use the link below:

    https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1bzSzkY9ZHzzY8Xhzt0HZfZhRG1Gq_Si-?usp=sharing

    You can also find all of our bibliographies on our website: www.amindr.com

    --------------------------------------------------------------

    Follow-up on social media for more updates!

    Twitter: @AMiNDR_podcast

    Instagram: @AMiNDR.podcast

    Facebook:  AMiNDR  

    Youtube: AMiNDR Podcast

    LinkedIn: AMiNDR Podcast

    Email: amindrpodcast@gmail.com  

    -------------------------------------------------------------- 

    Please help us spread the word about AMiNDR to your friends, colleagues, and networks! And if you could leave us a rating and/or review on your streaming app of choice (Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to the podcast), that would be greatly appreciated! It helps us a lot and we thank you in advance for leaving a review! Don’t forget to subscribe to hear about new episodes as they come out too. 

    Thank you to our sponsor, the Canadian Consortium of Neurodegeneration in Aging, or CCNA, for their financial support of this podcast. This helps us to stay on the air and bring you high quality episodes. You can find out more about the CCNA on their website: https://ccna-ccnv.ca/

    Our team of volunteers works tirelessly each month to bring you every episode of AMiNDR. This episode was scripted and hosted by Naila Kuhlmann, edited by Michelle Grover, and reviewed by Elyn Rowe and Ellen Koch. The bibliography was made by Anjana Rajendran and the wordcloud was created by Sarah Louadi (www.wordart.com). 

    Big thanks to the sorting team for taking on the enormous task of sorting all of the Alzheimer’s Disease papers into episodes each month. For February 2022, the sorters were Sarah Louadi, Christy Yu, Ben Cornish, Eden Dubchak, Vrishali Salian, Kira Tosefsky, and Elyn Rowe. Also, props to our management team, which includes Sarah Louadi, Ellen Koch, Naila Kuhlmann, Elyn Rowe, Anusha Kamesh, and Lara Onbasi for keeping everything running smoothly.

    Our music is from "Journey of a Neurotransmitter" by musician and fellow neuroscientist Anusha Kamesh; you can find the original piece and her other music on soundcloud under Anusha Kamesh or on her YouTube channel, AKMusic.   

    https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMH7chrAdtCUZuGia16FR4w   

    -------------------------------------------------------------- 

    If you are interested in joining the team, send us your CV by email. We are specifically looking for help with sorting abstracts by topic, abstract summaries and hosting, audio editing, creating bibliographies, and outreach/marketing. However, if you are interested in helping in other ways, don't hesitate to apply anyways.  

    --------------------------------------------------------------

    *About AMiNDR: *  

    Learn more about this project and the team behind it by listening to our first episode: "Welcome to AMiNDR!" 

    How to Create an Outstanding Learning Strategy to Prepare Organisations for the Future of Work with Lou Tedrick

    How to Create an Outstanding Learning Strategy to Prepare Organisations for the Future of Work with Lou Tedrick

    The Digital Adoption Show today features Lou Tedrick, the Vice President of Learning & Development at Verizon. Lou will answer a few unsaid questions including How to Create an Outstanding Learning Strategy to Prepare Organizations for the Future of Work.

    Lou is a Human Resources professional with extensive knowledge of organizational development, learning, and development, and employee relations. At Verizon, Lou is responsible for enterprise-wide learning and development opportunities including leadership development, product training, CS and sales skills training (consumer and business channels), HR/compliance training, IT technical training, tuition assistance, and L&D operations monitoring and analytics. Lou manages a virtual team of over 900 learning professionals across the globe.

    10:17 -What are some of the common digital transformation or learning initiatives that companies should focus on to upskill their employees?

    • Have a strategic workforce planning process and very specific roles as part of a broader job taxonomy. It helps build a clear picture of the critical skills needed for the future
    • The technology that's going to be required for the future, not only for our employees but for our business, we need to have highly technical folks. We should always look for ways to keep our technical staff on the cutting edge and at the forefront of technology skills
    • We're starting to see people asking us for more work in the areas of leadership, empathy, and generally on how to treat people in an engaging way. So that they feel excited and energised about coming to work. Now, the focus for us is on how to ensure that this paradigm shift continues in a consistent manner

    16:32 -What are consumer-grade technologies, and then how can enterprises and companies leverage them for creating a better learning experience for employees?

    • Consumer-grade technologies are those we use in our lives outside of work, and we expect them to operate the same way inside our work 
    • These platforms are being designed in such a way that we can create really engaging learning experiences, that could be as near to face-to-face as possible
    • It's so hard for our employees to keep everything in their minds. What they really need is that simple, digital information at their fingertips while they are supporting a customer while doing their work in the flow of work. Organizations should understand that, it's high time to start engaging employees in the flow of work

    24:44 -Why do you think there is such a discrepancy in employee behaviour? And how can companies overcome it?

    • Successful companies are those, that truly look for the voice of their employees, appreciate their voice, know about where their employees can pivot, and where you can balance employee needs and business needs together for the same goal
    • You have to create those types of experiences that are frictionless for employees which are really appealing to them, and also allow them to develop and grow with a business that offers flexibility

     

    GHP 028: The Power of Calming Your Mind w/ Arthur Leibowitz from Hand Eye Coaches

    GHP 028: The Power of Calming Your Mind w/ Arthur Leibowitz from Hand Eye Coaches

    In this week's episode I'm joined by Arthur Leibowitz from Hand Eye Coaches.

    We discuss the approach of creating ‘Hand Eye Coaches’ and the overall mission of the channel. Evolution of vision training and the reason behind the path it has taken. Three favorite and recommended hand eye drills. Discuss that one hack to improve vision and cognitive speed for goalies in hockey. Impact of VR on software and the industry. Discuss on what people can start doing at home to create more hand eye exercises and drills to enhance their performance. Detail the different mechanisms and skills that are associated with tracking like peripheral awareness, contrast sensitivity, depth etc.

    Click here for full show notes: https://goaliehacks.com/ghp-028-the-power-of-calming-your-mind-w-arthur-leibowitz-from-hand-eye-coaches/

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