PsyPost
  • Mental Health
  • Social Psychology
  • Cognitive Science
  • Neuroscience
  • About
No Result
View All Result
Join
My Account
PsyPost
No Result
View All Result
Home Exclusive Cognitive Science

New Stanford research sheds light on how children’s brains memorize facts

by Stanford University Medical Center
August 17, 2014
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Photo credit: Life Science Databases (Creative Commons)

Photo credit: Life Science Databases (Creative Commons)

Share on TwitterShare on Facebook

As children learn basic arithmetic, they gradually switch from solving problems by counting on their fingers to pulling facts from memory. The shift comes more easily for some kids than for others, but no one knows why.

Now, new brain-imaging research gives the first evidence drawn from a longitudinal study to explain how the brain reorganizes itself as children learn math facts. A precisely orchestrated group of brain changes, many involving the memory center known as the hippocampus, are essential to the transformation, according to a study from the Stanford University School of Medicine.

The results, which will be published online Aug. 17 in Nature Neuroscience, explain brain reorganization during normal development of cognitive skills and will serve as a point of comparison for future studies of what goes awry in the brains of children with learning disabilities.

“We wanted to understand how children acquire new knowledge, and determine why some children learn to retrieve facts from memory better than others,” said Vinod Menon, PhD, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and the senior author of the study. “This work provides insight into the dynamic changes that occur over the course of cognitive development in each child.”

The study also adds to prior research into the differences between how children’s and adults’ brains solve math problems. Children use certain brain regions, including the hippocampus and the prefrontal cortex, very differently from adults when the two groups are solving the same types of math problems, the study showed.

“It was surprising to us that the hippocampal and prefrontal contributions to memory-based problem-solving during childhood don’t look anything like what we would have expected for the adult brain,” said postdoctoral scholar Shaozheng Qin, PhD, who is the paper’s lead author.

Charting the Shifting Strategy

In the study, 28 children solved simple math problems while receiving two functional magnetic resonance imaging brain scans; the scans were done about 1.2 years apart. The researchers also scanned 20 adolescents and 20 adults at a single time point. At the start of the study, the children were ages 7-9. The adolescents were 14-17 and the adults were 19-22. The participants had normal IQs. Because the study examined normal math learning, potential participants with math-related learning disabilities and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder were excluded. The children and adolescents were studying math in school; the researchers did not provide any math instruction.

Google News Preferences Add PsyPost to your preferred sources

During the study, as the children aged from an average of 8.2 to 9.4 years, they became faster and more accurate at solving math problems, and relied more on retrieving math facts from memory and less on counting. As these shifts in strategy took place, the researchers saw several changes in the children’s brains. The hippocampus, a region with many roles in shaping new memories, was activated more in children’s brains after one year. Regions involved in counting, including parts of the prefrontal and parietal cortex, were activated less.

The scientists also saw changes in the degree to which the hippocampus was connected to other parts of children’s brains, with several parts of the prefrontal, anterior temporal cortex and parietal cortex more strongly connected to the hippocampus after one year. Crucially, the stronger these connections, the greater was each individual child’s ability to retrieve math facts from memory, a finding that suggests a starting point for future studies of math-learning disabilities.

Although children were using their hippocampus more after a year, adolescents and adults made minimal use of their hippocampus while solving math problems. Instead, they pulled math facts from well-developed information stores in the neocortex.

Memory Scaffold

“What this means is that the hippocampus is providing a scaffold for learning and consolidating facts into long-term memory in children,” Menon said. Children’s brains are building a schema for mathematical knowledge. The hippocampus helps support other parts of the brain as adultlike neural connections for solving math problems are being constructed. “In adults this scaffold is not needed because memory for math facts has most likely been consolidated into the neocortex,” he said. Interestingly, the research also showed that, although the adult hippocampus is not as strongly engaged as in children, it seems to keep a backup copy of the math information that adults usually draw from the neocortex.

The researchers compared the level of variation in patterns of brain activity as children, adolescents and adults correctly solved math problems. The brain’s activity patterns were more stable in adolescents and adults than in children, suggesting that as the brain gets better at solving math problems its activity becomes more consistent.

The next step, Menon said, is to compare the new findings about normal math learning to what happens in children with math-learning disabilities.

“In children with math-learning disabilities, we know that the ability to retrieve facts fluently is a basic problem, and remains a bottleneck for them in high school and college,” he said. “Is it that the hippocampus can’t provide a reliable scaffold to build good representations of math facts in other parts of the brain during the early stages of learning, and so the child continues to use inefficient strategies to solve math problems? We want to test this.”

RELATED

Political anger fuels support for violence mainly when voters feel ignored by the system
Cognitive Science

Study finds no association between frequency of video game play and spatial abilities

June 5, 2026
Scientists found a split-second shortcut your brain takes when reading numbers
Cognitive Science

New research indicates sounds you can’t hear can spike your cortisol levels, offering a biological reason for sudden creepy feelings

June 4, 2026
Scientists found a split-second shortcut your brain takes when reading numbers
Cognitive Science

Scientists found a split-second shortcut your brain takes when reading numbers

June 4, 2026
Physical activity and mental health: Exercise’s therapeutic potential for depression highlighted in new meta-analysis
Cognitive Science

Physical fitness is linked to brain health in young adults, but the effects differ by sex

June 3, 2026
People with a preference for staying up late show higher tendencies for everyday sadism
Animals

Visual experience physically shapes the brain’s feedback loops

June 3, 2026
Scientists have found a geospatial link between soil fertility and national intelligence scores
Cognitive Science

Scientists have found a geospatial link between soil fertility and national intelligence scores

June 3, 2026
Scientists discover how coffee interacts with the gut microbiome to affect the human brain
Cognitive Science

Fetal brain scans can predict a toddler’s vocabulary size years before they learn to speak

June 2, 2026
Scientists discover how coffee interacts with the gut microbiome to affect the human brain
Caffeine

Scientists discover how coffee interacts with the gut microbiome to affect the human brain

June 2, 2026

Follow PsyPost

The latest research, however you prefer to read it.

Daily newsletter

One email a day. The newest research, nothing else.

Google News

Get PsyPost stories in your Google News feed.

Add PsyPost to Google News
RSS feed

Use your favorite reader. We also syndicate to Apple News.

Copy RSS URL
Social media
Support independent science journalism

Ad-free reading, full archives, and weekly deep dives for members.

Become a member

Trending

  • The location of your body fat is linked to how fast your brain ages
  • Psychopathy and Machiavellianism often look identical, but daily behavior suggests otherwise
  • Visual experience physically shapes the brain’s feedback loops
  • Scientists have found a geospatial link between soil fertility and national intelligence scores
  • Scientists discover how coffee interacts with the gut microbiome to affect the human brain

Science of Money

  • Can ChatGPT beat the S&P 500? Eight months of daily picks suggest no
  • When inheritances shrink inequality, and when they widen it: A six-country look at the tipping point
  • Why winning makes some gamblers bet bigger: the psychological traits behind the “house money” effect
  • Why people think bankers are greedier than students (and why they may be wrong)
  • Does a rising tide lift all boats? Only with the right institutions, study finds

PsyPost is a psychology and neuroscience news website dedicated to reporting the latest research on human behavior, cognition, and society. (READ MORE...)

  • Mental Health
  • Neuroimaging
  • Personality Psychology
  • Social Psychology
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Cognitive Science
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms and conditions
  • Do not sell my personal information

(c) PsyPost Media Inc

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Subscribe
  • My Account
  • Cognitive Science Research
  • Mental Health Research
  • Social Psychology Research
  • Drug Research
  • Relationship Research
  • About PsyPost
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy

(c) PsyPost Media Inc