Dementia Hub Maths Test
Regular maths practice is one of the most powerful ways to keep the brain strong, flexible, and protected against cognitive decline especially as we age.
Every calculation activates multiple brain regions simultaneously: the prefrontal cortex (planning and decision making), parietal lobes (number sense and spatial reasoning), and hippocampus (working memory). These are the exact areas that shrink earliest in dementia. By repeatedly challenging them with addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division under gentle time pressure, we force the brain to forge and reinforce neural connections, a process called neuroplasticity.
Research consistently shows that adults who regularly do mental arithmetic maintain faster processing speed, sharper working memory, and better executive function longer than those who don’t. A 2023 meta analysis found that 15 to 20 minutes of daily number practice can slow cognitive ageing by the equivalent of several years.
For dementia patients and seniors, simple maths games are particularly valuable because they provide clear, achievable goals and immediate feedback both of which trigger dopamine release and combat apathy. Unlike passive activities, maths forces active engagement: holding numbers in mind, choosing strategies, correcting errors. This sustained mental effort is genuine cognitive resistance training.
In short, practising maths isn’t just about getting the right answer it’s evidence based brain gym that keeps neural pathways firing, builds cognitive reserve, and helps preserve independence and confidence longer.







