Why do some kids struggle with maths? It might be about more than just numbers

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Photo by Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash
Photo by Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash

Kids who struggle with maths might not just have issues with numbers, according to international researchers, who say these kids might also struggle adapting their thinking. The team presented kids with numerical symbols or clusters of dots, and asked them to select the bigger number. They say their findings suggest the kids who struggled in maths also had difficulties updating their thinking as they continued to get different types of trials wrong. This was supported by brain imaging, which pointed to weaker activity in areas of the brain linked to monitoring and adjusting behaviour as they learn.

News release

From: Society for Neuroscience

Exploring why some children struggle to learn math
Kids with math learning differences may have issues not only with processing numbers, but also with updating and adapting their thinking approaches as they discriminate between number amounts.
Children selected which numbers were bigger than others across different trials, with quantities represented as numerical symbols or as clusters of dots. The researchers created a model based on how much performance varied over time. The model suggested that children with difficulties in learning math struggled to update their thinking approach as they continued to get different types of trials wrong. Brain imaging helped explain why this might be the case, pointing to weaker activity in areas linked to monitoring and adjusting behavior. The researchers further discovered that weaker activity in these brain areas could predict whether a child had typical or atypical math abilities.

This work suggests that kids struggling to learn math may have difficulty not only with processing numbers, but also with updating their thought processes as they work with numbers. Speaking on implications, says Chang, “These impairments may not necessarily be specific to numerical skills, and could apply to broader cognitive abilities that involve monitoring task performance and adapting behavior as children learn.” The researchers hope to apply the model they developed on broader groups of children with other types of learning disabilities.

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conference:
JNeurosci
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Stanford University School of Medicine, USA
Funder: This research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (HD094623, HD059205, MH084164) and National Science Foundation (DRL-2024856) to V.M. and Stanford Maternal & Child Health Research Institute Postdoctoral Support Award to H.C. and P.M. We thank participating families and Miriam Rosenberg-Lee, Teresa Iuculano, Emma Adair, Shelby Karraker, and Samantha Mitsven for assistance with the study.
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