How can research benefit issues related to attention, concentration and memory?
The size of study groups, as well as results that can be replicated, are important to study success. HealthMaker Gregory Bayer, PhD talks in this video about how appropriate research can benefit issues related to attention, concentration and memory.
Transcript
[MUSIC PLAYING] Most clinical studies are still a patient group of 50, a patient group of 25.
A 100-person study is a large study. So we need aggregated numbers. We've done studies now with 2,000 patients, 1,500 patients.
How do you standardly measure these things called attention, concentration, and memory? And what's the level of reliability of the measurement?
And for what duration was the testing done or the exercise performed? And in what population?
Most clinical studies are still a patient group of 50, a patient group of 25.
A 100-person study is a large study. So we need aggregated numbers. We've done studies now with 2,000 patients, 1,500 patients.
Those are the kind of numbers we need. And the databases have to provide the profile to standardize the ability to mine
the data to get at the outcome. So as the field emerges scientifically, we get more standardization around those protocols
and those measurements, I think we're going to see more reliable, replicable results. And that will open the door to really the therapeutics
brain health nervous system
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