Choose your platform and buy
Try if one month free of charge with 10 licenses.
What is the account for?
Welcome to CogniFit! Welcome to CogniFit Research! CogniFit Healthcare Boost Your Business with CogniFit! CogniFit Employee Wellbeing

Sign up on here if you don't have your mobile handy

You are going to create a patient management account. This account is designed to give your patients access to CogniFit evaluations and training.

You are going to create a research account. This account is specially designed to help researchers with their studies in the cognitive areas.

You are going to create a student management account. This account is designed to give your students access to CogniFit evaluations and training.

You are going to create a family account. This account is designed to give your family members access to CogniFit evaluations and training.

You are going to create a company management account. This account is designed to give your employees access to CogniFit evaluations and training.

You are going to create a personal account. This type of account is specially designed to help you evaluate and train your cognitive skills.

You are going to create a patient management account. This account is designed to give your patients access to CogniFit evaluations and training.

You are going to create a family account. This account is designed to give your family members access to CogniFit evaluations and training.

You are going to create a research account. This account is specially designed to help researchers with their studies in the cognitive areas.

You are going to create a student management account. This account is designed to give your students access to CogniFit evaluations and training.

You are going to create a company management account. This account is designed to give your employees access to CogniFit evaluations and training.

You are going to create a developer account. This account is designed to integrate CogniFit’s products within your company.

loading

For users 16 years and older. Children under 16 can use CogniFit with a parent on one of the family platforms.

By clicking Sign Up or using CogniFit, you are indicating that you have read, understood, and agree to CogniFit's Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

Scan the below QR with your phone to register through our mobile app for the ultimate convenience and access on-the-go!

Enhance Your Experience!

If you don't have your mobile handy sign up on here

Download our app to enjoy a good experience on this device

Huawei App Gallery

If you don't have your mobile handy sign up on here

Cognitive Training for Adults with Insomnia

CogniFit has more than 2 million users worldwide

Cognitive Training for Adults with Insomnia

Trains and strengthens essential cognitive abilities in a professional way. Comprehensive report of results, progress, and evolution.

Who is it for?

This product is not for sale. This product is for research purposes only. For more info see CogniFit Research Platform

Multi-platform

Cognitive Training for Adults with Insomnia

Users under 16 years-old must use a family account

 

-
+
Number of family members

Users under 16 years-old must use a family account

-
+
Number of patients
Number of family members
Number of students
Number of participants
-
+
Months of training

Enter the desired number of patients and their months of training. Please note that the patient's subscription will begin at the time the patient registers. You may replace one patient with another if necessary.

Enter the desired number of family members and their training months. Please note that the member's subscription will begin at the time of registration. You may replace one family member with another if necessary.

Enter the desired number of students and their training months. Please note that the student's subscription will begin at the time of registration. You may replace one student for another if necessary.

Enter the desired number of participants and their training months. Please note that the participant's subscription will begin at the time of registration. You may replace one participant for another if necessary.

One-time payment

 

CogniFit: Leaders in Insomnia Brain Training

CogniFit: Leaders in Insomnia Brain Training

  • Access online activities and exercises for adults with insomnia
  • Helps strengthen cognitive skills impaired in adults with insomnia
  • Get a complete results, progress and evolution report

Insomnia is a sleep disorder that not only leads to problems falling asleep but is also associated with various cognitive impairments. Lack of rest can already be very disabling and cause daily difficulties, so cognitive problems associated with insomnia in adults make the situation worse. Fortunately, CogniFit training for adults with insomnia can help improve both cognitive state, and reduce insomnia symptoms when combined with appropriate therapy.

CogniFit's cognitive training program for adults with insomnia is accessible online from computers, tablets, and smartphones with an internet connection. This neuropsychological resource will allow us to strengthen and reinforce the brain capacities related to insomnia that are more deteriorated. This is done through entertaining cognitive stimulation activities. It is recommended to train at least 20 minutes a day, three days a week.

CogniFit training for insomnia in adults has clear objectives: to help regular therapy reduce the symptoms of insomnia (reduce the time needed to fall asleep, reduce the number of wake-ups, as well as increase the duration and quality of sleep), reduce the cognitive disturbances associated with insomnia in adults (fatigue, difficulty concentrating, frequent forgetfulness, difficulty processing information) and strengthen other cognitive abilities. In conclusion, this aims to help adults with insomnia improve their daily activities, encouraging personal, academic and work relationships.

CogniFit training for adults with insomnia consists of a large variety of stimulation activities and cognitive assessment tasks dedicated to strengthening the principal cognitive abilities most related to this sleep disorder. One of the distinctive features of CogniFit insomnia training is its ability to automatically modify its intervention plan to meet the specific needs of each user, making it possible to personalize the training to enhance its results.

Note: CogniFit does not treat insomnia, but may help improve cognitive skills affected by this disorder.

Excellent!

You're above average.

Memory

Perception

Attention

Coordination

Reasoning

Very low
Low
Average
High
Very high

Who is it for?

Who is it for?

Sleep disorders, such as insomnia, can affect virtually anyone and are truly disabling. CogniFit's insomnia training for adults tries to suit everyone, so it has created different training platforms:

Adults who would like to reduce their insomnia symptoms

Stimulate my cognitive abilities related to insomnia

Whether we want to complement the therapy we're receiving for insomnia, or if we haven't yet seen a professional, CogniFit training for adults with insomnia is available on the individual platform. From this platform, we will be able to perform personalized activities suggested by CogniFit in order to see our results and check our cognitive state.
Family members or caregivers

Strengthening my relative's cognitive abilities related to insomnia

If you have a family member with insomnia who is not familiar with technology, or simply prefers not to manage their own training account, you can use CogniFit's Family Platform. From this platform, we will be able to help our family member train and track their cognitive skills.
Healthcare Professionals

To help the cognitive skills of my adult patients with insomnia

Since CogniFit has demonstrated that combining its cognitive stimulation activities with the usual treatment for insomnia helps improve the symptoms and cognitive abilities, health professionals may be very interested in applying CogniFit to their patients. In order to ease patient management, CogniFit has created the Healthcare Professional Platform. With this platform, health professionals will also be able to track the evolution of patients whether they are using CogniFit in therapy or from home (cognitive remote stimulation).

Researchers and scientists

Study the effects of cognitive training in adults with insomnia

If we want to study the effect of cognitive stimulation in adults with insomnia, CogniFit's platform for researchers gives us the possibility to conveniently manage and compare the data of the participants in our study. In addition, the CogniFit Platform for Researchers has a control group that offers different tasks and always at the lowest level of difficulty in comparison to the other group.

Trained cognitive skills

Trained cognitive skills

It is difficult to differentiate which alterations may be the cause or consequence of lack of sleep. However, there are a number of cognitive abilities that are consistently impaired in people who have insomnia and other sleep problems. CogniFit insomnia training is designed to work intensively on these cognitive abilities, and has proven to help reduce the symptoms associated with insomnia:

Cognitive Domains Trained
Cognitive Skills

Memory

The ability to retain or use new information and recover memories of the past. Memory allows us to store internal representations of knowledge in our brain and retain events from the past to use them in the future. Learning is a key process in memory because it makes it possible to incorporate new information or modify existing information in the previous mental schemas. After this coding and storage, the information, the memory, or the learning should be prepared to be recovered in the future. The hippocampus is a key brain structure in the memory process and works actively during sleep to consolidate the information acquired during the day.

Excellent8.1%

689Your Score

400Average

Naming

Naming

Ability to refer to an object, person, place, concept, or entity by name. Ability to find in our "lexical storage" the specific word we are looking for and reproduce it. People with insomnia often have greater difficulty than people without this sleep disorder in accessing the name of familiar words.

665Your Score

400Average

Working Memory

Working Memory

The ability to temporarily store and manipulate the information we process in order to perform complex cognitive tasks. Insomnia causes worse outcomes in the activities that require our working memory.

675Your Score

400Average

Non-verbal Memory

Non-verbal Memory

Ability to code, store, and retrieve memories whose contents are not words—for example, faces, figures, images, melodies, sounds and noises, or written symbols. People who suffer from insomnia have greater difficulty in remembering information with or without verbal content.

685Your Score

400Average

Perception

Ability to interpret the stimuli of the environment. Perception is responsible for identifying and making sense of the information received from our sensory organs based on our prior knowledge of the world. Perception is a process that can begin through input from different senses (like sight, hearing, touch, etc.), and that our brain is responsible for integrating, giving it a sense of wholeness. The brain areas associated with perception are responsible for uniting the information perceived by the different sensory organs so that we can interact effectively with external stimuli, regardless of the stimulated sensory organ. In order for the perceptual process to be carried out properly, a process of assimilation and understanding of the information received will be necessary.

Very good6.1%

503Your Score

400Average

Visual Perception

Visual Perception

Ability to correctly interpret the information perceived by our eyes (photoreception, transmission and basic processing, preparation of information and perception). Some studies have associated poor sleep efficiency with impaired visual perception, especially in older people.

452Your Score

400Average

Coordination

Ability to efficiently perform precise and ordered movements. Coordination allows us to perform our movements quickly and efficiently. The cerebellum is the brain structure responsible for making coordinated movements: from walking, holding a glass, or dancing ballet. It helps to maintain coherence between our movements and the feedback we get from our senses.

You can improve1.1%

192Your Score

400Average

Response Time

Response Time

Ability to detect, process and respond to a stimulus. This ability is related to having good reflexes since it refers to the time from when we perceive something until we give a response accordingly. Some studies indicate that people with insomnia require more time to react to react to stimuli that are unexpected or which require a quick reaction time.

212Your Score

400Average

Attention

Ability to filter distractions and focus on relevant information. Attention accompanies every cognitive process and is in charge of assigning cognitive resources depending on the relevance of both internal and external stimuli. Good attention skills are necessary for other high-level processes, like memory or planning. Attention is an essential process that requires the use of different parts of the brain, from the brainstem or the parietal cortex to the prefrontal cortex. However, it seems that the right hemisphere has a predominant role in controlling attention. This cognitive area makes it possible to stay alert and pay attention to the stimuli when other irrelevant distractors are present, concentration for long periods of time, alternating attention between different activities, or dividing attention when two events are happening at the same time.

Excellent7.1%

459Your Score

400Average

Divided Attention

Divided Attention

The ability of our brain to attend to different stimuli or tasks at the same time, and thus respond to the multiple demands of the environment. Divided attention is a type of simultaneous attention that allows us to process different sources of information and successfully execute more than one task at a time. One of the biggest cognitive complaints of people who suffer from insomnia is attention problems, especially in more demanding processes, such as performing two activities at the same time.

500Your Score

400Average

Inhibition

Inhibition

Inhibition is the ability to control impulses or automatic responses and to generate responses mediated by attention and reasoning. People with insomnia often have difficulties in inhibitory control, which often leads to them performing automatic processes even if they do not meet current situation.

422Your Score

400Average

What will I get from CogniFit brain training for adults with insomnia?

What will I get from CogniFit brain training for adults with insomnia?

CogniFit may help improve the cognitive status and sleep quality of adults with insomnia by enhancing the quality of life. Therefore, CogniFit insomnia training pursues the following goals:

  • To improve the cognitive state of adults with insomnia. People with insomnia may notice difficulties in many activities due to impaired cognitive abilities. Cognitive stimulation aims to reduce these everyday difficulties.
  • Reduce symptoms related to insomnia. It has been demostrated that CogniFit training, along with regular insomnia therapy, can help adults improve sleep quality, reduce the time needed to fall asleep, reduce waking up during the night, and increase sleep duration.
  • Encourage academic and work performance. Both sleep problems and cognitive difficulties associated with insomnia can impair our efficiency at work or our attention during class. Proper treatment can reduce these difficulties associated with insomnia.
  • Promote social and personal life. Daily activities (such as sleeping, preparing food, meeting with friends) can be severely affected by insomnia. By reducing the symptoms of insomnia and strengthening our cognitive skills, it is possible to improve our quality of life.

How does it strengthen cognitive function?

How does it strengthen cognitive function?

The neuropsychological activities offered by CogniFit training for adults with insomnia represent a progressive challenge to our brains and cognitive abilities. Our brain will gradually modify its brain connections to adapt and respond effectively to the demands of the training.

This ability of our brain to modify its structure in order to adapt to the stimulation received is called "brain plasticity". This mechanism allows our brain to mold within the possibilities according to our experience. Thus, if CogniFit activities constantly demand an adequate effort of cognitive skills (such as memory or attention), our brain will try to modify slightly so that these activities are reinforced. As a consequence, the areas of the brain involved will become more efficient.

When these activities are tailored to our needs, such as CogniFit training, cognitive abilities can be improved and, in addition, help reduce insomnia symptoms in adults. This can translate into a higher quality of life.

1st WEEK

2nd WEEK

3rd WEEK

Graphic projection of neural networks after 3 weeks.

Benefits

Benefits

CogniFit's cognitive training for adults with insomnia has been designed after many years of research. Some of the advantages that make this online cognitive training the best option are:

Easy to use

CogniFit is designed to be comfortable, simple and intuitive to use. The processes of obtaining and storing data, or the choice of cognitive intervention plan are completely automated, so you only have to worry about training.

Highly attractive

The aspect of the platform and the training activities are intended to be pleasant and motivating so that they fit in with all types of users and encourage adherence to the training plan.

Interactive and visual format

CogniFit presents activities in an interactive and understandable way.

Complete results report

At the end of each training session, a summary is shown with the most relevant data. This helps to know what our strengths and weaknesses are, or if we have improved or worsened our score.

Progress and evolution

Not only does it provide information on the last session, but it also informs us about our general tendency and evolution. Even though we scored worse in the last session, our evolution can be positive and show progress.

Adapted to each user

The data collected by the system during training allows CogniFit to personalize the type of activity and level of difficulty for upcoming sessions. Therefore, CogniFit adapts to our cognitive needs, strengthening our weaknesses and reinforcing our strengths.

Tele-stimulation

CogniFit's online format allows the user to access their training from any device with an internet connection (whether from a computer, tablet or smartphone). This is also an advantage for professionals who want their patients to perform insomnia training from home, permitting cognitive remote stimulation.

What happens if you don't train your cognitive skills?

What happens if you don't train your cognitive skills?

People with insomnia can easily recognize the difficulties in attention, memory and executive functions. When an adequate intervention on these cognitive impairments is not carried out, further difficulties will arise in attending to, incorporating, managing, maintaining and recovering new information, worsening our academic, work and personal performance.

Personalized cognitive training can improve our cognitive performance on a daily basis, enhancing the state of some essential skills.This multi-dimensional and systematic training favors the activation of altered neural patterns in insomnia.

Memory

Perception

Attention

Coordination

Reasoning

How much time should I spend with CogniFit?

S M T W T F S

How much time should I spend with CogniFit?

CogniFit insomnia training lasts approximately 15-20 minutes, although it may vary slightly depending on the person. A minimum of one session a day, three days a week, is recommended. However, the number of daily or weekly sessions may be increased or decreased depending on the condition and needs of the user. In any case, it is always more advisable to do moderate and constant training rather than intense but inconsistent training.

Each training session for adults with insomnia consists of three activities: the first two are cognitive stimulation, and the third is an assessment. In this way, the CogniFit program trains our cognitive state while measuring our progress, allowing us to personalize the intervention plan to optimize training and results.

CogniFit is unique

CogniFit is unique

Multidisciplinary Exercises

Complete results report

Automatic task selection

Leading Instrument

Dynamic Difficulty Adjustment

Customized for each user

Scientifically validated

CogniFit has a number of features that make your cognitive assessments and training program unique. One of these distinctive qualities of the cognitive training for insomnia is that it allows the cognitive abilities altered in this sleep disorder to be stimulated in a personalized way through its standardized and multi-dimensional activities.

CogniFit's patented ITS™ (Individualized Training System) technology automatically personalizes the difficulty and type of exercises that will be presented to the user during adult insomnia training. This patented technology has been designed by an international team of scientists, neurologists, and psychologists, who research the latest discoveries and advances in the brain.

Every person is different, and so are their cognitive needs. This is why it is so important that the training is tailored to each user. What is useful for one person does not have to be useful for another, even if both suffer from insomnia. That's why CogniFit implements ITS technology, which allows training to be adapted to the user.

In addition, CogniFit keeps track of the user's status in each training session. That's why CogniFit keeps track of the user's cognitive health in each training session, so it can automatically adjust to make the training more effective.

In any case, it should be noted that all cognitive stimulation games are not the same. Using CogniFit helps us to stimulate our cognitive abilities and improve our insomnia symptoms in a rigorous and systematic way.

Customer Service

Customer Service

If you have any questions about CogniFit Training for adults with insomnia including data performance, management or interpretation, you can contact us immediately. Our team of professionals will answer your questions and help you with everything you need.

Contact Us Now

References

References

  • Kalmbach, D.A., Buysse, D.J., Cheng, P., Roth, T., Yang, A. Drake, C.L. Nocturnal cognitive arousal is associated with objective sleep disturbance and indicators of physiologic hyperarousal in good sleepers and individuals with insomnia disorder. Sleep Med. 2019 Nov, In press.
  • Oshi, K., Okauchi, H., Yamamoto, S., Higo-Yamatmoto, S. Dietary natural cocoa ameliorates disrupted circadian rhythms in locomotor activity and sleep-wake cycles in mice with chronic sleep disorders caused by psychophysiological stress. Nutrition. 2020 Feb (4):75-76.
  • Taylor, D.J., Pruiksma, K.E., Hale, W., McLean, C.P., Zandberg, L., Brown, L., Mintz, J., Young-McCaughan, S., Peterson, A.L., Jarvis, J.S., Dondanville, K.A., Litz, B.T., Roache, J., Foa, E.B. Sleep problems in active duty military personnel seeking treatment for posttraumatic stress disorder: Presence, change, and impact on outcomes. Sleep. 2020 Apr. In press.
  • Lund, H.N., Pedersen, I.N., Johnsen, S.P., Heymann-Szlachcinska, A.M., Tuszewska, M., Bizik, G., Larsen, J.I., Kulhay, E., Larsen, A., Grønbech, B., Østermark, H., Borup, H., Valentin, J.B., Mainz, J. Music to improve sleep quality in adults with depression-related insomnia (MUSTAFI): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial. Trials. 2020 Apr 21(1):305.
  • Wu, Y., Zhuang, Y., Qi, J. Explore structural and functional brain changes in insomnia disorder: A PRISMA-compliant whole brain ALE meta-analysis for multimodal MRI. Medicine (Baltimore). 2020 Apr 99(14).
  • Dar, N.J., Muzamil, A. Neurodegenerative diseases and Withania somnifera (L.): An update. J Ethnopharmacol. 2020 Mar. In press.
  • Yamaguchi, M., Yamada, K., Iseki, M., Karasawa, Y., Murakami, Y., Enomoto, T., Kikuchi, N., Chiba, S., Hara, A., Yamaguchi, K., Inada, E. Insomnia and caregiver burden in chronic pain patients: A cross-sectional clinical study. PLoS One. 2020 Apr 15(4).
  • Lin K.H., Chen, Y.J., Yang, S.N., Liu, M.W., Kao, C.C., Nagamine, M., Vermetten, E., Lin, G.M. Association of psychological stress with physical fitness in a military cohort: The CHIEF study. Mil Med. 2020 Apr. In press.
  • Gallo, J.J., Hwang, S., Truong, C., Reynolds, C.F., Spira, A.P. Role of persistent and worsening sleep disturbance in depression remission and suicidal ideation among older primary care patients: The PROSPECT study. Sleep. 2020 Apr. In press.
  • Zhang, Z.L., Gao, Y.G., Zang, P., Gu, P.P., Zhao, Y., He, Z.M., Zhu, H.Y. Research progress on mechanism of gastrodin and p-hydroxybenzyl alcohol on central nervous system. Zhongguo Zhong yao Za Zhi. 2020 Jan 45(2):312-220.
  • Rajabi Majd, N., Broström, A., Ulander, M., Lin, C.Y., Griffiths, M.D., Imani, V., Ahorsu, D.K., Ohayon, M.M., Pakpour, A.H. Efficacy of a theory-based cognitive behavioral technique App-based intervention for patients with insomnia: randomized controlled trial. J Med Internet Res. 2020 Apr. 22(4).
  • Haimov, I., Shatil, E. Cognitive training improves sleep quality and cognitive function among older adults with insomnia. PLoS One. 2013 Apr. 8(4).
  • Haimov, I., Hanukkah, E., Horowitz, Y. Chronic insomnia and cognitive functioning among older adults. Behavioral Sleep Medicine. 2008 Jan. 6(1):32-54.
  • Morin, C.M., Benca, R. Chronic insomnia. The Lancet. 2012 Mar. 379(9821):24-30.
  • Stoller, M. K. Economic effects of insomnia. Clinical Therapeutics: The International Peer-Reviewed Journal of Drug Therapy. 1994. 16(5), 873–897.
  • Roth, T. Insomnia: Definition, prevalence, etiology, and consequences. J Clin Sleep Med. 2007 Aug. 3(5):7-10.
  • Kupfer, D. J., Reynolds, C.F. Management of Insomnia. The New England Journal of Medicine. 1997 Jan, 336:341-346.
  • Taylor, D.J., Lichtenstein, K.L., Durrence, H.H., Reidel, B.W., Bush, A.J. Epidemiology of insomnia, depression, and anxiety. Sleep. 2005 Nov, 28(1):1457-1464.
  • Bonnet, M.H. Hyperarousal and insomnia. Sleep Medicine Reviews. 1997 Dec, 1(2):97-108.
  • Harvey, A.G. A cognitive model of insomnia. Behaviour research and therapy. 2002 Aug, 40(8):869-893.
  • Morin, C.M., Hauri, P.J., Espie, C.A., Spielman, A.J., Buysse, D.J., Bootzin, R.R. Nonpharmacologic treatment of chronic insomnia. Sleep. 1999 Dec, 22(8):1134-1156.
  • Zhao, Y., Zhang, Y., Yang, Z., Wang, J., Xiong, Z., Liao, J., Hao, L., Liu, G., Ren, Y., Wang, Q., Duan, L., Zheng, Z., Dong, J. Sleep disorders and cognitive impairment in peritoneal dialysis: A multicenter prospective cohort study. Kidney Blood Press Res. 2019 Sep, 44(5):1115-1127.
  • Yu, J.S., Kuhn, E., Miller, K.E., Taylor, K. Smartphone apps for insomnia: examining existing apps’ usability and adherence to evidence-based principles for insomnia management. Transl Behav Med. 2019 Jan, 9(1):110-119.
  • Patel, s., Ojo, O., Genc, G., Oravivattanakul, S., Huo, Y., Rasameesoraj, T., Wang, L., Bena, J., Drerup, M., Foldvary-Schaefer, N., Ahmed, A., Fernandez, H.H. A computerized cognitive behavioral therapy randomized, controlled, pilot trial for insomnia in Parkinson disease (ACCORD-PD). J Clin Mov Disord. 2017 Aug, 4:16.
  • Cellini, N. Memory consolidation in sleep disorders. Sleep Med Rev. 2017 Oct, 35:101-112.
  • Fortier-Brochu, É., Beaulieu-Bonneau, S., Ivers, H., Morin, C.M. Insomnia and daytime cognitive performance: a meta-analysis. Sleep Medicine Reviews. 2012 Feb, 16(1):82-94.
  • Adler, I,. Weidner, K, Eberhard-Gran, M., Garthus-Niegel, S. The impact of maternal symptoms of perinatal insomnia on social-emotional child development: A population-based, 2-year follow-up study. Behav Sleep Med. 2020 Apr, 4:1-15.
  • Osnes, R.S., Eberhard-Gran, M., Follestad, T., Kallestad, H., Morken, G., Roaldset, J.O. Mild-pregnancy insomnia and its association with perinatal depressive symptoms: A prospective cohort study. Behav Sleep Med. 2020 Mar, 31:1-18.

Please type your email address