The Free Press Journal

AI to spot why kids lag behind at school

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Anovel machine learning technology can help identify clusters of learning difficulti­es that children struggle with at school with health conditions such as attention deficit hyperactiv­ity disorder (ADHD), autism or dyslexia. The researcher­s, from the University of Cambridge, fed a computer algorithm with cognitive testing data, including measures of listening skills, spatial reasoning, problem solving, vocabulary and memory.

Based on these data, the algorithm suggested that the children best fit into four clusters of difficulti­e — difficulti­es with working memory skills and difficulti­es with processing sounds in words. The others were children with broad cognitive difficulti­es in many areas and children with typical cognitive test results for their age.

“By looking at children with a broad range of difficulti­es we found unexpected­ly that many children with difficulti­es with processing sounds in words don’t just have problems with reading — they also have problems with maths,” said lead author Duncan Astle from the varsity. “We need to move beyond the diagnostic label and we hope this study will assist with developing better interventi­ons that more specifical­ly target children’s individual cognitive difficulti­es.”

Difficulti­es with working memory — the short-term retention and manipulati­on of informatio­n — have been linked with struggling with maths and with tasks such as following lists. Difficulti­es in processing the sounds in words, called phonologic­al skills, has been linked with struggling with reading.

“Our study is the first of its kind to apply machine learning to a broad spectrum of hundreds of struggling learners,” Astle said.

Much of the previous research into learning difficulti­es has focussed on children who had already been given a particular diagnosis, such as ADHD, autism or dyslexia.

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