Commercial brain-training apps — Lumosity, Elevate, Peak, BrainHQ, CogniFit, and many others — typically claim to improve general cognition. The peer-reviewed evidence base is mixed at best, and the claims have been the subject of regulatory action.
- Lumosity / Lumos Labs (2016 FTC settlement): the FTC ordered Lumos Labs to pay $2 million and barred the company from making unsubstantiated claims about cognitive improvement, age-related decline, and academic performance. The case is the standard cautionary citation for the field.
- 2014 Stanford / Max Planck consensus statement: ~70 scientists signed a public statement that the brain-training industry's claims were not supported by the literature, prompting a counter-statement from another group of researchers. The dispute is itself instructive — the question is not settled the way marketing pages suggest.
- Transfer is the central problem. Most apps measurably improve performance on the task practiced ("near transfer") but do not reliably produce gains in untrained, real-world cognition ("far transfer"). Far transfer is what consumers actually want.
- Dual n-back as a working-memory intervention enjoyed a wave of attention after Jaeggi et al. (2008). Replication attempts have been mixed; meta-analyses (Soveri et al., 2017) find modest near-transfer and limited far-transfer.
None of this means brain-training apps are useless — practicing reaction-time tasks does make you faster at reaction-time tasks, which is genuinely satisfying. It means the strong general-cognition claims do not hold up.