All You Can ET 4+

Brain training made fun

New York University

Designed for iPad

    • 4.8 • 8 Ratings
    • Free

Screenshots

Description

All You Can ET is a game designed to train cognitive flexibility, a subskill of executive functions

All You Can ET is a game designed to train cognitive flexibility, a subskill of executive functions. Cognitive flexibility involves inhibiting a prior perspective and considering a new perspective (Diamond, 2013).

Players need to apply frequently changing rules to give differently colored aliens the right food or drink they need to survive.

How does this support learning?
Executive functions refer to a set of top-down, goal-oriented cognitive processes that enable people to control, monitor and plan behaviors and emotions. Miyake and Friedman’s model supports a unity-and-diversity view of EF in that it incorporates the three distinct but related components of EF: inhibitory control, task-switching and updating (Miyake et al., 2000).

What is the research evidence?
Our research suggests that All you Can ET is an effective way to train Cognitive flexibility. Homer, B.D., Plass, J.L., Rose, M.C., MacNamara, A.*, Pawar, S.*, & Ober, T.M. (2019). Activating Adolescents’ “Hot” Executive Functions in a Digital Game to Train Cognitive Skills: The Effects of Age and Prior Abilities. Cognitive Development, 49, 20-32.


Research has found that EF is related to performance in literacy and math along with long-term gains in school performance and academic readiness (Blair & Razza, 2007; Brock, Rimm-Kaufman, Nathanson, & Grimm, 2009; St Clair-Thompson & Gathercole, 2006; Welsh, Nix, Blair, Bierman, & Nelson, 2010) and that disparities in EF among preschool children from low-income versus high-income homes may contribute to the achievement gap (Blair & Razza, 2007; Noble, McCandliss, & Farah, 2007).

This game is part of the Smart Suite, created by New York University’s CREATE lab in collaboration with the University of California, Santa Barbara, and The Graduate Center, CUNY.

The research reported here was supported by the Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education, through Grant R305A150417 to the University of California, Santa Barbara. The opinions expressed are those of the authors and do not represent views of the Institute or the U.S. Department of Education.

What’s New

Version 1.2

Fixed issues with pause menu and when saving progress after going back to the main menu.

Ratings and Reviews

4.8 out of 5
8 Ratings

8 Ratings

MiqueH ,

Thought drift sinks you

I am enjoying this game. It is a fun little diversion. What I find interesting about it is, if I focus I get easily get 100% of the targets. But as soon as my thoughts drift, I start missing almost all of them. If you want a high score, play when you can give this game total attention.

Cqhi ,

Level Select Screen is Glitched

Hello, I’m writing this to inform the developers that the level select screen is bugged. It does not allow me to choose levels I have already completed, with locks still over the icons despite three golden stars being under the lock. I accidentally reset to level 1, and would not like to restart all the way to where I was before.

App Privacy

The developer, New York University, has not provided details about its privacy practices and handling of data to Apple. For more information, see the developer’s privacy policy.

No Details Provided

The developer will be required to provide privacy details when they submit their next app update.

More By This Developer

NYU Mobile
Education
Nursing Sim
Games
Safe NYU
Education
NYU Guided Tour
Business
NYU-moji
Social Networking
Gwakkamole
Games

You Might Also Like

Neuro Runners
Games
Poly Rules!
Games
Train your Brain Visuoespatial
Games
NBack Game
Games
Listen - Auditory Training
Games
Quandary
Games