Challenging your brain helps keep it healthy. Here's how to do it
[March 10, 2026]
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
WASHINGTON (AP) — “Exercise your brain,” experts advise people hoping to
stave off dementia. But how? Stretching your brain might be the better
description.
Do a crossword puzzle a day and you may just get good at crosswords.
Instead, research increasingly shows that a variety of habits and
hobbies are like a cognitive workout, building knowledge and skills that
may beef up parts of the brain as we get older.
One recent study linked a lower risk of Alzheimer's disease and
cognitive decline to lifelong learning, meaning intellectually
stimulating experiences — reading and writing, learning another
language, playing chess, solving puzzles, going to museums — from
childhood into retirement.
“They kind of like stretch your brain and your thinking. You’re using
your different cognitive systems,” explained neuropsychologist Andrea
Zammit of Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, who led that study.
If you didn’t embrace what Zammit calls cognitively enriching activities
early in life, it’s not too late to get started. Middle age offers an
important window for protecting brain health and scientists are
examining a wide range of possible ways to stay sharp, from taking up
music to birdwatching and brain-training games.
“It’s not just one activity. It’s more about finding meaningful
activities that you might be passionate about,” Zammit said — and
sticking with them rather than dabbling.

Physical health is critical to brain health, too. That’s why experts
also recommend the work-up-a-sweat kind of exercise as well as
controlling blood pressure, good sleep, even later-in-life vaccination.
There’s no magic recipe to prevent either dementia or the normal
cognitive decline of aging, cautioned Dr. Ronald Petersen, an
Alzheimer’s specialist at the Mayo Clinic. But lifestyle changes offer a
chance to “slow down the arc of deterioration,” he said.
Building cognitive reserve may buffer an aging brain
Zammit's study on lifelong learning study enrolled nearly 2,000 older
adults, ranging from age 53 to 100, who started out dementia-free and
were tracked for eight years. Researchers quizzed them about educational
and other cognitively stimulating activities in their youth, middle and
older ages, and administered a battery of neurologic tests.
Some eventually were diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease — but it struck
five years later in those with the highest amount of lifelong learning
compared to those with the least amount, Zammit’s team reported in the
journal Neurology. And staying more mentally active in middle age and
beyond was linked to a slower rate of cognitive decline.
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A section of a preserved human brain on display at the Museum of
Neuroanatomy at the University at Buffalo, in Buffalo, N.Y., on
Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2003. (AP Photo/David Duprey, File)
 More interesting, Zammit said, were
autopsy findings from 948 participants who died during the study:
Even when their brains harbored Alzheimer's hallmarks, the more
cognitively “enriched” people had better memory and thinking skills
and a slower decline before their death.
That’s what scientists call cognitive reserve. It means learning
strengthened neural connections in various regions, helping the
brain to be more resilient, able to work around damage from aging or
disease at least for a while.
More clues that exercising the brain matters
The Rush study can’t prove cause-and-effect — it shows an
association between cognitive stimulation and dementia risk. Other
studies offer similar clues, such as those linking brain health to
playing a musical instrument.
Another study hinted that brain “speed training” — using an online
program that requires spotting images as a screen flashes increasing
distractions — also may help. A study funded by the National
Institutes of Health now is examining if there's benefit to
long-term computerized exercises that aim to improve attention and
reaction time.
That brain processing speed affects how we multitask or drive, said
Jessica Langbaum of the Banner Alzheimer’s Institute, who isn’t
involved with the brain training research. For now, she advises
choosing activities that help you think on your feet — maybe joining
a book club to combine solo reading with discussion and social
connection.
Here are other steps to lower dementia risk
Lots of chronic health problems that strike in middle age can
increase the risk of later-in-life Alzheimer’s or other forms of
dementia. For example, high blood pressure damages blood vessels,
which is bad for the heart and reduces blood flow to the brain.
Poorly controlled diabetes can spur damaging inflammation in the
brain.

That means key recommendations for heart health — get regular
exercise, eat lots of fruits and vegetables, avoid obesity and
control diabetes, high blood pressure and high cholesterol — also
are good for brain health.
A bonus step: Get vaccinated against shingles. It not only prevents
that incredibly painful rash but growing research shows the
vaccinated have a lower risk of developing dementia.
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