An fMRI investigation of instructional guidance in mathematical problem solving

Publication date: June 2014 Source:Trends in Neuroscience and Education, Volume 3, Issue 2 Author(s): Hee Seung Lee , Jon M. Fincham , Shawn Betts , John R. Anderson In this fMRI study, students learned to solve algebra-like problems in one of the four instructional conditions during behavioral session and solved transfer problems during imaging session. During learning, subjects were given explanatory or non-explanatory verbal instruction, and examples that illustrated the problem structure or the solution procedure. During transfer, participants solved problems that required complex graphical parsing and problems that required algebraic transformations. Explanatory instruction helped in the initial phase of learning, but this benefit disappeared in transfer. The example type had little effect on learning, but interacted with problem type in the transfer. Only for algebraic problems, the structural example led to better transfer than the procedural example. The imaging data revealed no effect of verbal instruction, but found that participants who had studied structural examples showed higher engagement in the prefrontal cortex and angular gyrus. Activity of the right rostrolateral prefrontal cortex in the initial transfer block predicted future mastery.
Source: Trends in Neuroscience and Education - Category: Neuroscience Source Type: research