{Reference Type}: Editorial {Title}: A 109-Year-Old Pastime Beats a High-Tech Teenager. {Author}: Merrell P; {Journal}: NEJM Evid {Volume}: 1 {Issue}: 12 {Year}: 2022 Dec 暂无{DOI}: 10.1056/EVIDe2200268 {Abstract}: Surprise! According to findings in the article entitled "Computerized Games versus Crosswords Training in Mild Cognitive Impairment," now published in NEJM Evidence,1 solving crosswords had a more beneficial effect on older adults with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) than training with an array of Web-based brain games. The researchers had hypothesized just the opposite outcome, in part, on the basis of the findings of a 2015 study2 involving cognitively intact participants of a greater age range (18-80 years of age in the earlier study vs. 55-95 years of age in the current study).