Monday, 13 July 2026

Dementia in People with Disabilities and Health Conditions

 


What is Dementia?

Dementia is a disease that affects the brain.

Our brain controls how we think, remember, communicate, solve problems, and carry out everyday tasks.

For example, it helps us:

  • Get dressed.

  • Prepare meals.

  • Go for a walk.

  • Talk to other people.

  • Remember important information.

As dementia progresses, the brain becomes less able to do these things.

A person with dementia may:

  • Forget people, places, or recent events.

  • Remember things that happened many years ago but not what happened a few minutes ago.

  • Become confused.

  • Have difficulty finding the right words.

  • Lose everyday skills, such as using a knife and fork or managing money.


Dementia in People with Disabilities and Health Conditions

Dementia affects people with and without disabilities.

However, for people who already have a learning disability, autism, communication difficulties, epilepsy, or other long-term health conditions, dementia can bring extra challenges.

It can sometimes be harder to recognise dementia because the person may already have communication or memory difficulties. Health professionals need to look for changes from the person's usual abilities rather than comparing them with other people.

Although dementia affects everyone differently, people with disabilities deserve the same respect, support, and access to healthcare as everyone else.


Being Misunderstood

People living with dementia are sometimes unfairly labelled as:

  • "Crazy"

  • "Senile"

  • "Not all there"

  • "Hopeless"

  • "Past it"

These labels are hurtful and untrue.

People with dementia are still the same people underneath. They deserve dignity, kindness, patience, and understanding.

Many people with lifelong disabilities have experienced being misunderstood throughout their lives. Developing dementia can make this even harder.


Memory Loss

People with dementia may find it difficult to:

  • Remember conversations.

  • Remember what they have read or watched.

  • Learn new information.

  • Remember what they were doing.

  • Carry out familiar tasks.

Some people remember events from many years ago but struggle to remember what happened a few minutes earlier.


My Personal Experience

As a child, I took strong medication for epilepsy. The medication affected my awareness, learning, and memory.

My memory was much worse than it is today. This sometimes caused misunderstandings with adults and led to bullying from other children because they did not understand what I was experiencing.

After I stopped taking the medication, my memory and learning slowly improved over the next few years. I gradually became more independent and gained confidence in everyday life.

My experience taught me how important it is for professionals to understand that memory difficulties can have many different causes and should never simply be dismissed.


Epilepsy and Dementia

Researchers continue to study the relationship between epilepsy and dementia.

Some studies suggest that certain people with epilepsy may have a higher risk of developing dementia later in life, but having epilepsy does not mean a person will definitely develop dementia.

I have lived with epilepsy since birth. My seizures stopped when I was 12 years old and returned between the ages of 31 and 43 before stopping again.

I have also experienced anxiety, and I know from personal experience that panic attacks and seizures can sometimes be confused because they can share some similar symptoms.


Speech Problems and Dementia

Having speech or communication difficulties does not automatically mean a person is at greater risk of dementia.

Speech problems can occur for many different reasons, including stroke, neurological conditions, developmental disabilities, hearing loss, or lifelong communication disorders.

If someone develops new or worsening communication problems, they should always be assessed by an appropriate healthcare professional.


Learning Disabilities and Dementia

Some people with learning disabilities have a higher risk of developing certain types of dementia.

People with Down syndrome have the highest known risk of developing Alzheimer's disease because of genetic factors.

However:

  • Not everyone with Down syndrome develops dementia.

  • Not everyone with a learning disability develops dementia.

  • Many people with disabilities never develop dementia.

Every person is different.


Different Types of Dementia

Alzheimer's Disease

The most common type of dementia. It mainly affects memory, thinking, and problem-solving.

Vascular Dementia

Caused by reduced blood flow to the brain. It can occur after one or more strokes or from damage to small blood vessels.

Dementia with Lewy Bodies

Caused by abnormal protein deposits called Lewy bodies in the brain. It shares some symptoms with Parkinson's disease, but not everyone with Parkinson's develops dementia.


Living with Dementia

People with dementia may:

  • Become confused.

  • Lose confidence.

  • Need support to stay safe.

  • Repeat questions or conversations.

  • Forget where they are going.

  • Have difficulty recognising people or places.

  • Become upset when they realise their memory is changing.

Some people may look in the mirror and feel confused because they do not recognise the older person looking back at them.


Support

With the right support, many people with dementia continue to enjoy meaningful lives.

Support may include:

  • Family and friends.

  • Healthcare professionals.

  • Dementia specialists.

  • Occupational therapists.

  • Speech and language therapists.

  • Social workers.

  • Community support services.

Professionals should always involve the person with dementia as much as possible in decisions about their care while respecting their rights, dignity, and independence.

If there are concerns that a person is no longer able to keep themselves safe, professionals should follow local safeguarding laws and procedures to make sure the person receives the support they need.


Final Thoughts

Dementia changes a person's memory and thinking, but it does not change their value as a human being.

People with dementia should be treated with patience, kindness, understanding, and respect.

The better we understand dementia, the better we can support those who live with it and the people who care for them.

Dementia and Learning Disabilities

 

Sunday, 12 July 2026

Memory (Easy Read)

 


Memory helps us learn, remember, and use information.

Memory has three main steps:

1. Encoding

  • Encoding is taking in new information.

  • Your brain changes information into a form it can store.

  • Paying attention helps encoding.

Example: Listening carefully in class.


2. Storage

  • Storage means keeping information in your memory.

  • Information may stay for a short time or a long time.


3. Retrieval

  • Retrieval means bringing stored information back into your mind.

  • Clues and reminders can make remembering easier.

Example: A familiar smell reminds you of your grandmother's house.


The Three Stages of Memory

Sensory Memory

  • Holds information from your senses.

  • Lasts only about 3 to 4 seconds.

  • Helps your brain decide what is important.

Example: Seeing a flash of lightning or hearing a loud bang.


Short-Term (Working) Memory

  • Holds information you are using right now.

  • Usually stores about 7 pieces of information (plus or minus 2).

  • Lasts about 20 seconds unless you repeat or use the information.

Example: Remembering a phone number long enough to dial it.


Long-Term Memory

  • Stores information for days, months, or even a lifetime.

  • It has a very large storage capacity.

  • Important memories are often stored here.

Example: Remembering your first day at school.


Types of Long-Term Memory

Procedural Memory (Implicit Memory)

  • Helps you remember how to do things.

  • You do not have to think about each step.

  • It controls skills and habits.

Examples

  • Riding a bicycle

  • Driving a car

  • Tying your shoes

  • Typing on a keyboard


Declarative Memory (Explicit Memory)

  • Stores information you can think about and explain.

  • Includes facts and personal experiences.

There are two types.

Semantic Memory

  • Stores facts and general knowledge.

Examples

  • T

  • The

  • capital of France is Paris.

  • Knowing that water freezes at 0°C (32°F).

Episodic Memory

  • Stores personal experiences.

  • Includes memories of places and events.

Examples

  • Your seventh birthday.

  • Your first day at college.

  • A family holiday.


Parts of the Brain and Memory

Hippocampus

  • Helps make new long-term memories.

  • Very important for learning facts and experiences.

Prefrontal Cortex

  • Helps with thinking, planning, attention, and working memory.

Amygdala

  • Processes emotions.

  • Helps emotional events become easier to remember.


Amnesia

Anterograde Amnesia

  • A person cannot make new long-term memories after a brain injury or illness.

  • Older memories are often still remembered.

Example: A person remembers childhood but cannot remember what happened yesterday.


Retrograde Amnesia

  • A person loses memories from before a brain injury.

  • New memories may still be formed after recovery.

Example: A person cannot remember their wedding but can remember new events.


Memory Is Not Perfect

Each time we remember something, the memory can change.

Memories can be affected by:

  • emotions,

  • suggestions from other people,

  • new information,

  • the passage of time.

This is called memory reconstruction.


Eyewitness Memory

Eyewitness memories are not always accurate.

People may remember things incorrectly because of:

  • leading questions,

  • misleading information,

  • focusing on a weapon instead of other details,

  • stress during the event.

This is why eyewitness evidence should be treated carefully.


Common Memory Errors

People may experience:

  • Transience – memories fade over time.

  • Absent-mindedness – forgetting because you were not paying attention.

  • Blocking – knowing something but not being able to remember it at that moment.

  • Misattribution – remembering information but linking it to the wrong source.

  • Suggestibility – other people's ideas change your memory.

  • Bias – beliefs and feelings influence memories.

  • Persistence – unwanted memories keep coming back.


Ways to Improve Memory

You can improve memory by:

  • Paying close attention.

  • Understanding information instead of just repeating it.

  • Grouping information into smaller chunks (chunking).

  • Using pictures and mental images.

  • Linking new information to stories or things you already know.

  • Practising active recall by testing yourself.

  • Reviewing information regularly using spaced repetition.

  • Getting enough sleep, eating a healthy diet, and exercising.


Key Points

  • Encoding = Taking in information.

  • Storage = Keeping information.

  • Retrieval = Remembering information.

  • Sensory memory lasts only a few seconds.

  • Working memory holds information you are using now.

  • Long-term memory stores information for a long time.

  • Procedural memory stores skills like riding a bike.

  • Semantic memory stores facts.

  • Episodic memory stores personal experiences.

  • The hippocampus helps create new long-term memories.

  • The amygdala links memories with emotions.

  • Memory can change over time and is not always completely accurate.

Memory Formation and Forgetting (Easy Read)

 


How Memories Are Made

Our memory works in three main steps.

1. Encoding

  • Encoding is the first step of memory.

  • Your brain takes in information from your senses.

  • You need to pay attention for information to be encoded well.

  • The brain changes the information into a form it can store.

Example: Listening carefully to a teacher helps your brain begin to remember the lesson.


2. Storage

  • Storage is where the brain keeps information.

  • Some memories stay for only a short time.

  • Other memories move into long-term memory and can last for many years.

  • Important or meaningful information is often stored better.

Example: You may remember your birthday from many years ago because it is important to you.


3. Retrieval

  • Retrieval means remembering or bringing information back into your mind.

  • It is easier to remember things when you have clues or reminders.

  • Good encoding and storage make retrieval easier.

Example: Smelling a favourite meal may remind you of your childhood.


Memory Reconstruction

Memory is not like watching a video recording.

Each time we remember something:

  • the memory is rebuilt,

  • it can be affected by our feelings,

  • new information can change it,

  • some details may become inaccurate.

This is why two people can remember the same event differently.


Forgetting

Forgetting is a normal part of life.

There are several reasons why we forget:

Decay

  • Memories can become weaker over time if they are not used.

Example: Forgetting a phone number you have not used for years.

Interference

  • New information can make it harder to remember older information.

  • Older information can also make it harder to learn something new.

Example: Learning a new password and accidentally typing your old one.

Retrieval Failure

  • The memory is still in your brain, but you cannot find it at that moment.

  • A clue or reminder may help you remember later.

Example: You cannot remember someone's name until someone mentions where you met them.


Key Points

  • Encoding = Taking in new information.

  • Storage = Keeping information in memory.

  • Retrieval = Remembering stored information.

  • Memory reconstruction = Memories can change each time we remember them.

  • Forgetting is normal and can happen because of decay, interference, or retrieval failure.

Saturday, 11 July 2026

Easy Read Summary What is intelligence?

 


Intelligence is the ability to:

  • Learn new information.
  • Understand ideas.
  • Solve problems.
  • Adapt to new situations.

Psychologists do not all agree on one definition of intelligence. Different theories explain it in different ways.


Spearman's Theory (General Intelligence)

Charles Spearman believed people have one general intelligence called g.

  • This general ability affects how well people perform on many mental tasks.
  • Someone who does well in one academic subject may also do well in others because of this general intelligence.

Cattell's Theory

Raymond Cattell said intelligence has two parts.

Fluid Intelligence

This is your ability to:

  • Think logically.
  • Solve new problems.
  • Adapt to unfamiliar situations.

Example:
Finding a different route home because a road is closed.

Crystallized Intelligence

This is the knowledge you have learned over time.

Example:
Knowing multiplication tables or remembering historical facts.


Sternberg's Triarchic Theory

This is the part that connects most closely to your own ideas.

Robert Sternberg believed intelligence has three types.

TypeWhat it meansExample
AnalyticalThinking, analysing, solving academic problemsSolving a maths question
CreativeInventing new ideas and thinking outside the boxDesigning a new invention
PracticalSolving everyday problems ("street smarts")Fixing a broken appliance or dealing with everyday situations

This links with your theory

Earlier you said:

Some people solve problems with their brains, some with their bodies, and some with both.

That isn't exactly Sternberg's theory, but there is a similarity. Sternberg argues that intelligence is more than just academic ability. Practical and creative skills are also important.


Gardner's Multiple Intelligences

Howard Gardner believed people have different kinds of intelligence instead of just one.

Examples include:

  • Language
  • Logical-mathematical
  • Musical
  • Bodily-kinesthetic (using the body skilfully)
  • Spatial
  • Interpersonal (understanding other people)
  • Intrapersonal (understanding yourself)
  • Naturalistic (understanding nature)

This matches something you said

You mentioned:

Someone may be good at helping people with emotional problems but not very good at maths.

Gardner's theory would support this idea because he believed people can have strengths in different areas. However, it's worth noting that Gardner's theory remains influential in education but has been criticized by many psychologists for lacking strong empirical evidence.


Emotional Intelligence

Emotional intelligence means being able to:

  • Understand your own emotions.
  • Recognise other people's emotions.
  • Show empathy.
  • Build healthy relationships.
  • Manage your emotions appropriately.

Some researchers believe emotional intelligence is very important for success, although there is ongoing debate about how it should be defined and measured.


Creativity

Creativity means:

  • Producing new ideas.
  • Finding original solutions.
  • Thinking in different ways.

Creative people often:

  • Learn a lot about a topic.
  • Keep practising.
  • Ask other people for ideas.
  • Take sensible risks.
  • Look at problems from different angles.

Two Types of Thinking

Divergent Thinking

Thinking of many possible answers.

Example:
"How many different uses can you think of for a paper clip?"

Convergent Thinking

Finding one correct answer.

Example:
"What is 7 × 8?"


Connecting this to your own idea

One thing you've consistently pointed out is that people have different strengths and weaknesses. OpenStax presents several theories that support the idea that intelligence is not simply "being good at maths" or "having a high IQ." Different theories recognise different kinds of abilities, such as practical problem solving, creativity, social understanding, and learned knowledge.

I would only make one small adjustment to your wording. Rather than saying some people use their brains and others use their bodies, psychology would usually say that everyone uses their brain, but they rely on different combinations of cognitive, physical, social, emotional, and practical skills. For example, a carpenter, a counsellor, a musician, and a mathematician all use their brains—but they apply different abilities to solve different kinds of problems.

So your idea could be refined like this:

Every person has unique strengths and weaknesses. Intelligence is not just one ability. People solve problems in different ways by using different combinations of analytical thinking, creativity, practical experience, emotional understanding, and physical skills. Good problem solving also includes recognising when another person's expertise is needed.

That statement is consistent with the broad themes in this OpenStax chapter while acknowledging that psychologists continue to debate exactly how intelligence should be defined and measured.

Understanding problem solving.

 

Mainly through thinking

Planning, analysing, calculating, remembering information, and reasoning through a solution.

Example: a mathematician, programmer, or strategist.

Mainly through physical action

Learning by doing, building, moving, testing, and adjusting.

Example: a carpenter, mechanic, athlete, or dancer.

Using both together

Combining planning with physical action.

Example: a surgeon, engineer, chef, or pilot.


Why your theory makes sense

Modern psychology recognises that problem solving is not only a mental activity.

For example:

  • Embodied cognition: our bodies can influence how we think.

  • Procedural learning: some skills are learned through repeated physical practice.

  • Cognitive problem solving: other problems rely more on memory, reasoning, and language.

So a person fixing a bicycle may solve the problem by handling the parts and testing them, while another person solving a crossword uses mainly mental reasoning.

A simple way to picture it: No one is equally skilled at every type of problem solving. People develop different strengths through a combination of their abilities, experiences, education, personality, and practice.

Thinking

Action

Problem Solving

Different people use different amounts of each.

Where this connects to your own experience

From what you have described in earlier conversations, this idea may explain why some tasks feel easier when you can do them practically rather than only read about them.

Many people with Dyslexia or Dyspraxia find that hands-on experience helps them understand and remember information more effectively.

A refined version of your theory

Strong psychology wording

"All people are problem solvers, but they solve problems in different ways. Some rely mainly on thinking and reasoning, some rely mainly on physical action and experience, and many use a combination of both. Effective problem solving often depends on matching the method to the person and the situation."

That is a strong insight, and it would actually make an interesting discussion point in your psychology assignment because it links cognition, learning, and practical experience together.



Dementia in People with Disabilities and Health Conditions

  What is Dementia? Dementia is a disease that affects the brain. Our brain controls how we think, remember, communicate, solve problems, an...