The Prison Puzzle Program is an innovative rehabilitation initiative designed to improve cognitive function, reduce recidivism, and enhance mental well-being among incarcerated individuals through systematic deployment of puzzles including Sudoku, jigsaw puzzles, and brain teasers. This evidence-based program leverages existing research demonstrating the cognitive benefits of puzzle-solving to address the documented problem of cognitive decline in prison environments.
Recent scientific research provides compelling evidence for the cognitive benefits of puzzle-solving activities:
Jigsaw Puzzles:
Recruit multiple visuospatial cognitive abilities simultaneously
Provide protective factors against cognitive aging
Enhance visual perception, mental rotation, and working memory
Sudoku Benefits:
Enhances logical reasoning and problem-solving skills
Improves working memory and attention span
Activates prefrontal cortex regions involved in cognitive control
Develops visual-spatial processing abilities
Source: Multiple neuropsychological studies, including Sahu et al., 2020
Cognitive Training Research:
Speed-of-processing training can reduce dementia risk by up to 29%
Mental exercise may reduce Alzheimer's disease risk by up to 70%
Regular puzzle engagement shows measurable improvements in cognitive efficiency
Key Research Finding: A comprehensive PMC study found that jigsaw puzzling provides two "active ingredients" that benefit cognition: process-specific cognitive demands that contribute to increased brain reserve, and regulation of distressing emotions that can prevent chronic stress states known to negatively impact cognitive aging.
As documented in Scientific American (February 2024), Christopher Havens exemplifies the transformative potential of puzzle-based cognitive rehabilitation. A high school dropout serving a 25-year murder sentence, Havens discovered mathematics through Sudoku puzzles slipped under his cell door during solitary confinement.
"I would get lost in it for days and days and days," Havens recalled. "I would dream about it."
Starting with basic Sudoku and algebra problems, Havens progressed through calculus into number theory—the study of integers and their relationships. Three years later, he co-authored a significant mathematical discovery published in a Princeton University journal, proving that puzzle-based interventions can spark profound cognitive transformation even in the most challenging circumstances.
This remarkable journey from solitary confinement to published mathematician demonstrates the untapped rehabilitative potential that exists within puzzle-based cognitive interventions.
Research reveals that prison environments actively damage the cognitive abilities essential for successful reintegration:
Environmental Factors:
Prisons are "deliberately impoverished environments" with minimal physical, mental, and social stimulation
Brain functions connected with self-regulation decline after just 3 months of imprisonment
Studies show neurons in sensory and motor brain regions shrink by 20% after one month in solitary confinement
Impact on Recidivism:
Reduced self-regulation is a significant risk factor for reoffending
Cognitive deficits in executive functioning, working memory, and attention are strongly linked to increased recidivism rates
Former inmates need these exact cognitive skills to successfully plan, focus, and control impulses upon release
Based on established research showing that cognitive behavioral therapy programs in prisons achieve recidivism reductions of 20-30%, and given that puzzles target similar cognitive mechanisms (working memory, attention, executive function, emotional regulation), we project the Prison Puzzle Program could achieve:
15-25% reduction in recidivism rates through improved cognitive function
40% reduction in prison disciplinary incidents through increased mental engagement
Significant cost savings through reduced reoffending and improved prison management
Immediate benefits for 500,000+ inmates nationwide
The Claremont Forum's Prison Library Project(PLP) will handle distribution of puzzle books and jigsaw puzzles directly to U.S. prisons. Their established relationships with correctional facilities and security-approved processes enable immediate implementation without bureaucratic delays.
Prison Legal News (PLN) is a magazine with over 50,000 incarcerated monthly readers. The Cade Moore Foundation intends to sponsor a dedicated puzzle column featuring Sudoku, crosswords, and brain teasers. This partnership provides the largest possible reach within the incarcerated population through an established, trusted publication.
Edovo, a leader in prison education technology, will deliver interactive Sudoku puzzles through secure prison tablets. This partnership provides:
Interactive puzzles with real-time answer checking
At least one new Sudoku puzzle uploaded daily
Low-cost delivery through existing secure tablet infrastructure
Scalable distribution across multiple correctional systems
Our three-pronged strategy ensures comprehensive coverage across different prison systems and individual preferences, providing evidence-based cognitive stimulation adapted to existing prison infrastructure and security requirements.
Securing funding for rehabilitation programs typically faces significant barriers:
Competing Priorities: Traditional funders focus on urgent issues like housing, healthcare, and basic safety
Perception Issues: Puzzles may seem "frivolous" compared to life-threatening problems
Evidence Requirements: Limited prison-specific research requires extensive education of potential funders
Bureaucratic Delays: Traditional grant cycles can take 12-18 months with uncertain outcomes
Rather than trying to convince skeptical traditional funders of the benefits of puzzles, we are targeting puzzle connoisseurs who already understand the cognitive and therapeutic benefits through personal experience.
Target Funding Sources:
Jigsaw puzzle collectors and enthusiasts
Sudoku champions and competition winners
Puzzle industry executives and family business owners
Cognitive health advocates and brain training proponents
Renowned puzzle advocates
Why This Strategy Works:
Intuitive Understanding: No lengthy process to convince them of the merits of the Prison Puzzle Program is needed because they already believe from experience in the benefits puzzles
Personal Connection: They've experienced the cognitive and emotional rewards firsthand
Rapid Decision-Making: Private individuals and companies can move faster than bureaucratic grant processes
Documented puzzle enthusiasts could serve as potential funders. These individuals don't need scientific studies to understand that puzzles improve focus, provide stress relief, and enhance cognitive function as they have already experienced these benefits personally.
Immediate Engagement: No special training or additional staff required
Self-Directed Learning: Adaptable to any skill level or educational background
Measurable Progress: Clear sense of achievement and cognitive improvement
Emotional Regulation: Healthy coping mechanism for stress and anxiety
Security Compliance: No special materials, spaces, or security concerns
Cost-Effective: Minimal ongoing costs compared to traditional therapy programs
Research demonstrates that puzzle-solving activities enhance the exact cognitive skills needed for successful reintegration: working memory, attention, logical reasoning, and visual-spatial processing. Unlike expensive therapeutic interventions, puzzles provide these benefits through engaging, self-motivated activities that inmates can pursue independently.
The Prison Puzzle Program represents a paradigm shift in correctional rehabilitation—moving from expensive, complex interventions to simple, scalable solutions backed by scientific evidence. We're not asking funders to take a leap of faith; we're asking puzzle enthusiasts to support an intervention whose benefits they already understand.
The science is clear. The infrastructure exists through our established partnerships. The need is urgent, with over 2 million Americans currently incarcerated. What's needed now are funders who recognize that sometimes the most profound solutions come in the most unassuming packages: a jigsaw puzzle, a Sudoku grid, a crossword clue.
Christopher Havens proved that a Sudoku puzzle slipped under a cell door can spark mathematical genius. Imagine what systematic, evidence-based puzzle interventions could accomplish across the entire American prison system.
For more information about sponsoring the Prison Puzzle Program or to learn about partnership opportunities, please contact us at info@TheCadeMooreFoundation.org
Voss, Scientific American, "Pioneering Advanced Math from Behind Bars," February 2024
Fissler et al., "Jigsaw Puzzling Taps Multiple Cognitive Abilities," PMC, 2018
Sahu et al., "Role of prefrontal cortex during Sudoku task," PMC, 2020
Edwards et al., "Speed of processing training results in lower risk of dementia," ACTIVE Trial
Alzheimer's Research and Prevention Foundation studies on mental exercise
Ligthart et al., "Prison and the brain: Neuropsychological research," 2019
Multiple systematic reviews on cognitive behavioral therapy effectiveness in correctional settings