DIGITAL LIFE
Seniors are reaping brain benefits from using technology, study says
For years, we've heard that screens and gadgets could harm our mental health. But new research suggests just the opposite: among older people, technology can help keep the brain active and reduce the risk of dementia.
When she was 16, Wanda Woods enrolled in a typing course because her father said it would help her find a job. Sure enough, she was soon hired by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
Decades later, Wanda—now 67—continues to use technology not only at work but also to organize family trips with the help of AI chatbots. For her, staying connected also means staying mentally active.
Researchers analyzed 57 studies with more than 411,000 older adults and found that those who use computers, cell phones, and the internet regularly have a lower risk of developing cognitive impairment or dementia.
"It's like hearing from a nutritionist that bacon is good for you," jokes Michael Scullin, a neuroscientist at Baylor University.
According to him, the simple act of facing the challenges of new technologies—updates, passwords, bugs, different systems—is already a powerful mental exercise.
The results, published in the journal Nature Human Behavior, show that almost 90% of the studies analyzed indicated a positive effect of technology on the brains of older adults.
This is because:
-Solving technical problems stimulates memory and reasoning;
-Reminder apps compensate for memory lapses;
-Social media and messaging strengthen social connections, known to slow cognitive decline.
Furthermore, the decline in dementia rates in countries like the US and the UK may be linked, among other factors, to higher education levels, better health care—and also to the increasing use of technology by older adults.
However, not everything is rosy. Online scams still affect millions of older adults, often with much greater financial losses than those of younger adults. Excessive screen time can also lead to social isolation. "If you binge-watch Netflix for 10 hours, there's no benefit whatsoever," warns psychiatrist Murali Doraiswamy of Duke University.
Of course, digital technologies present risks, too. Online fraud and scams often target older adults, and while they are less apt to report fraud losses than younger people, the amounts they lose are much higher, according to the Federal Trade Commission. Disinformation poses its own hazards. And as with users of any age, more is not necessarily better. “If you’re bingeing Netflix 10 hours a day, you may lose social connections,” Doraiswamy pointed out. Technology, he noted, cannot “substitute for other brain-healthy activities” like exercising and eating sensibly.
An unanswered question: Will this supposed benefit extend to subsequent generations, digital natives more comfortable with the technology their grandparents often labored over? “The technology is not static — it still changes,” Boot said. “So maybe it’s not a one-time effect.” Still, the change tech has wrought “follows a pattern,” he added. “A new technology gets introduced, and there’s a kind of panic.” From television and video games to the latest and perhaps scariest development, artificial intelligence, “a lot of it is an overblown initial reaction,” he said.
“Then, over time, we see it’s not so bad and may actually have benefits.” Like most people her age, Woods grew up in an analog world of paper checks and paper maps. But as she moved from one employer to another through the ’80s and ’90s, she progressed to IBM desktops and mastered Lotus 1-2-3 and Windows 3.1.
The experts' recommendation is clear: technology can help, but it's no substitute for physical activity, good nutrition, and an active social life.
Along the way, her personal life turned digital, too: a home desktop when her sons needed one for school, a cellphone after she and her husband couldn’t summon help for a roadside flat, a smartwatch to track her steps.
These days, Woods pays bills and shops online, uses a digital calendar, and group-texts her relatives. And she seems unafraid of AI, the most earthshaking new tech. Last year, Woods turned to AI chatbots like Google Gemini and OpenAI’s ChatGPT to plan an RV excursion to South Carolina. Now, she’s using them to arrange a family cruise celebrating her 50th wedding anniversary.
And what about future generations?...The big question is whether the same positive effect will be replicated among digital natives, who grew up surrounded by technology. Researchers say there's still no definitive answer—but historical patterns show that initial panic with new technologies tends to be exaggerated.
From TV to video games, and now with artificial intelligence, the cycle seems to repeat itself: first fear, then adaptation, and finally recognition of the benefits.
mundophone