Cognitive Testing
Mental health and mood disorders like ADHD and dementia, are intrinsically linked to core aspects of cognitive function key to quality of life—understand how these disorders affect your cognition by completing a cognitive assessment.
Why mental fitness can't be described in a single number.
Objectively Measuring Your Cognitive Function allows you to:
Gain a comprehensive understanding of your brain health, which
will be used by healthcare professionals to individualize treatment
or wellness plans according to your needs.
Re-assess your cognition throughout treatment to objectively
measure improvements, giving you confidence that interventions
are having the desired affects.
Continue monitoring post-treatment to ensure you’re maintaining a
level of cognitive function that enables you to live your best life.
What Is A Cognitive Test?
Backed by Science
Using a tablet, desktop or laptop computer, you’ll take a series of quick, fun, and engaging tasks that have been validated to measure your memory, concentration, reasoning and verbal abilities—all core areas of cognition that may be affected by a mental health condition.
Patient-friendly
A digital version of testing that requires no special hardware. Creyos cognitive tasks take only 2-3 minutes to complete. Easy to follow instructions and a gamified experience lead to better completion rates and more engaged patients.
Precise results
Creyos tasks are designed to detect even mild cognitive impairment, helping healthcare providers identify potential symptoms of dementia, Alzheimer's, and mental health conditions earlier for quicker intervention and better patient outcomes.
How Do Cognitive Tests Work?
Tasks in Creyos precisely measure cognitive function against four key domains:
Short Term Memory
Creyos enables healthcare professionals to assess cognitive function related to memory. Individual tasks evaluate visuospatial working memory, spatial short term memory, working memory, and episodic memory.
Reasoning
Four engaging tasks help measure reasoning skills, testing you in mental rotation, visuospatial processing, deductive reasoning, and planning.
Concentration
Your ability to concentrate is measured in two tasks that test your attention and response inhibition. These cognitive tasks apply hallmarks of established neuropsychological tests like the Stroop.
Verbal Ability
Healthcare providers are able to assess a your verbal ability through tasks that measure your verbal reasoning and verbal short term memory. Versions of these tests have dated back to the 1960s and have a long history of being used in neuropsychological testing.