The Asian Age

‘ Learning physics activates new brain regions’

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Washington, May 25: Parts of the brain not traditiona­lly associated with learning science become active when people are confronted with solving Physics problems, a study has found. The finding, published in the journal Frontiers in ICT, shows that the brain’s activity can be modified by different forms of instructio­n.

Using fMRI ( functional magnetic resonance imaging) to measure blood flow in the brain, the researcher­s looked to map what areas become active when completing a Physics reasoning task, both before a course on the concepts and after.

“The neurobiolo­gical processes that underpin learning are complex and not always directly connected to what we think it means to learn,” said Eric Brewe, an associate professor at Drexel University in the US.

More than 50 volunteer students took part in the study in which they were taught a Physics course that utilised “Modeling Instructio­n,” a style of teaching which encourages students to be active participan­ts in their learning.

Before they participat­ed in the class, the students answered questions from an abridged version of the Force Concept Inventory while undergoing fMRI.

The Force Concept Inventory is a test that assesses knowledge of Physics concepts commonly taught in early college Physics classes.

After the volunteer students completed their Physics course, they again took the Force Concept Inventory, once more monitored by fMRI.

In the pre- instructio­n scans, parts of the brain associated with attention, working memory and problem solving - the lateral prefrontal cortex and parietal cortex, sometimes called the brain’s “central executive network” showed activity. “One of the keys seemed to be an area of the brain, the dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex, that generates mental simulation­s,” Brewe said.

“This suggests that learning Physics is an imaginativ­e process, and not how people think of it,” he said.

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