Jury's In: Law School Test Messes with the Mind

brain regions that changed after training for the lsat.
Practicing for the law-school entrance exam seems to increase connections between brain cells (regions highlighted in green or blue showed changes after training), researchers report Aug. 22, 2012.
(Image credit: Bunge lab image)

Intensely studying for the Law School Admission Test (LSAT) can improve one's chances of getting a high score, but it can also change brain structure and may even boost IQ, neuroscientists say.

"The fact that performance on the LSAT can be improved with practice is not new. People know that they can do better on the LSAT, which is why preparation courses exist," lead researcher Allyson Mackey, of the University of California, Berkeley, said in a statement. "What we were interested in is whether and how the brain changes as a result of LSAT preparation, which we think is, fundamentally, reasoning training. We wanted to show that the ability to reason is malleable in adults."

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