Results indicated improvement in the Wechsler Digit Span scaled score for the training group (paired t test=2.96, df=30, p<0.01), and an analysis of covariance revealed significantly greater improvement than in the control group (F=3.63, df=2, 61, p<0.05). Moreover, the most dramatic results occurred in the digits backward task. More than 60% of the subjects receiving training showed significant effect size improvements (0.2 standard deviations or greater) compared with 25% of those in the work-only condition (χ2=6.81, df=1, p<0.01), and 40% had large effect size improvements (0.8 standard deviations or greater) compared with 18% for those who received work therapy only. Thus, the neurocognitive training of memory had improved verbal working memory, generalizing from our training procedures to the unpracticed task of digits backward.