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Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • Logical Reasoning
  • Working Memory
  • Processing Speed
  • Verbal Reasoning
  • Creative Thinking
  • Pattern Recognition
  • How the Dimensions Interact
  • Reading the Radar Chart Honestly
  • Why Six and Not One
  • Sources
All Stories
Published April 12, 2025

Why Daily Measures Six Cognitive Dimensions and What Each Means

By DailyEditorial Team

Six dimensions, six different reasons. A deep dive into logical reasoning, working memory, processing speed, verbal reasoning, creative thinking, and pattern recognition.

Introduction

Most cognitive tracking apps reduce performance to a single number, often labeled IQ or brain age. The number is easy to display and almost meaningless. Real cognitive ability has several semi-independent dimensions, and a single score averages over distinctions that matter.

Daily tracks six dimensions explicitly: logical reasoning, working memory, processing speed, verbal reasoning, creative thinking, and pattern recognition. This article explains what each one means, how it shows up in puzzle play, and why the multi-dimensional view is more useful than a single number.

Logical Reasoning

Logical reasoning is the ability to apply rules to information step by step to reach conclusions. In cognitive psychology it overlaps with fluid reasoning, the capacity to solve novel problems with little reliance on prior knowledge, and it draws on the prefrontal cortex's executive systems.

In Daily's games it is the dominant skill in Traffic Jam (dependency-chain solving), Air Hockey (route planning), and parts of Coin Maze (maze navigation). Players strong here tend to crack novel logic puzzles quickly and accurately even when the type is new, and we explore how that carries off-screen in our look at the real-world benefits of logical reasoning puzzles.

Working Memory

[@portabletext/react] Unknown block type "span", specify a component for it in the `components.types` propWorking memory is the temporary storage and active manipulation of information, the buffer that holds a phone number long enough to dial it or tracks where you are in a multi-step task while you handle interruptions.

It shows up across all six games but is especially prominent in Coin Maze, where you remember coin positions while planning slides, and in Money Tycoon, where you track multiple income streams and upcoming boost days.

Working memory capacity is among the most studied variables in aging and education research. It declines slowly with normal aging and is one of the more trainable systems, though gains tend to be specific to the trained task rather than broad, a nuance we cover in our review of working memory and puzzle games.

Processing Speed

Processing speed is the rate at which the brain performs simple cognitive operations. It does not measure intelligence directly; the field of mental chronometry uses it to gauge how quickly basic perception, decision, and motor response occur.

It is the dominant skill in Word Hunt, where two minutes is short enough that fast trace decisions matter more than perfect vocabulary, and it affects every timed game indirectly, since faster basic processing leaves more room for higher-level thinking.

Processing speed declines steadily across adult life, faster than most other dimensions, yet it is also one where regular practice produces measurable improvements at any age, as we detail in our piece on processing speed and puzzle performance.

Verbal Reasoning

Verbal reasoning covers vocabulary, word retrieval, and the ability to manipulate language. It is the most knowledge-dependent of the six, closest to what psychologists call crystallized intelligence, because the underlying inventory of words and meanings is built up over years of exposure.

In Daily it is the dominant skill in Word Hunt, with little verbal demand elsewhere. That makes it the dimension with the clearest single-game signal, as Word Hunt scores track verbal reasoning almost directly.

Creative Thinking

Creative thinking, often called divergent thinking, is the capacity to generate multiple solutions, notice unusual connections, and approach problems from non-obvious angles. It is harder to measure than the concrete dimensions and tends to surface across many tasks indirectly.

In Daily's lineup it is most prominent in Tile Fit, where the best placement often means seeing that an unusual orientation opens a multi-clear setup, and in Money Tycoon, where the strongest spending pattern balances upgrade types in non-obvious ways. We go deeper in our piece on creative thinking and puzzle games.

Pattern Recognition

[@portabletext/react] Unknown block type "span", specify a component for it in the `components.types` propPattern recognition is the ability to detect regularities in visual or symbolic information. It underlies much of human perception and supports nearly every structured task.

It is the largest single skill in Tile Fit, where reading the board and tray for line-clear opportunities is the core activity, and it contributes meaningfully to Word Hunt (spotting word clusters), Traffic Jam (recognizing common dependency shapes), and Air Hockey (reading block density). Our feature on pattern recognition games covers why the brain is so good at it.

How the Dimensions Interact

The six dimensions are presented separately, but in real play they work together. A strong Word Hunt run draws on verbal reasoning to know the words, processing speed to find them quickly, and pattern recognition to spot clusters on the grid. A Coin Maze run blends working memory, logical reasoning, and processing speed. No game isolates a single dimension perfectly; each leans toward some while still drawing on others.

This interaction is why a balanced profile across all six dimensions tends to support strong play across the whole rotation, while a spiky profile produces uneven results. A player who is exceptional at pattern recognition but weak in processing speed will excel at Tile Fit and struggle at Word Hunt. Seeing the dimensions as an interacting system, rather than six independent scores, helps explain why your performance varies across games and where targeted practice would help most.

Reading the Radar Chart Honestly

A radar chart is a powerful visual, but it invites overinterpretation. The shape reflects your performance on a specific set of games, not a clinical measurement of your underlying abilities. A dent in one dimension does not mean a deficiency; it may simply mean you play the games that stress that dimension less often, or that those games do not suit your style.

The most useful way to read the chart is over time and relative to yourself. Is the overall shape expanding as you practice? Is a dimension you targeted with deliberate practice growing relative to the others? Those trends carry real signal. The absolute size of any single spoke, compared to other people or to some imagined ideal, carries much less. Treat the chart as a personal progress tracker, not a verdict on your intelligence.

Why Six and Not One

A single score averages across dimensions and hides the actionable information. Two players with the same average might be strong in completely different areas: one excels at Word Hunt and struggles at Air Hockey, the other is the opposite. They have very different cognitive profiles even if their averages match. The radar chart on your Daily profile shows the breakdown for each player so practice can target specific dimensions rather than disappearing into a single number that tells no one what to work on.

The multi-dimensional view also makes progress visible. If you focus on processing-speed practice for two months and that score rises while the others stay flat, that is direct evidence the practice worked, where a single average might mask the same gain entirely. The simplest way to see your own breakdown is to play a few games and watch the radar fill in over the days that follow.

Sources

Wikipedia, Fluid and crystallized intelligence.

Wikipedia, Working memory.

Wikipedia, Mental chronometry.

Wikipedia, Pattern recognition (psychology).