Âé¶¹ÒùÔº


Could electric brain stimulation lead to better math skills?

math
Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

A painless, noninvasive brain stimulation technique can significantly improve how young adults learn math, my colleagues and I found in a . In a paper in PLOS Biology, we describe how this might be most helpful for those who are likely to struggle with mathematical learning because of how their brain areas involved in this skill communicate with each other.

Math is essential for many jobs, especially in science, technology, engineering and finance. However, a suggested that a large proportion of adults in developed countries (24% to 29%) have math skills no better than a typical seven-year-old. This can contribute to lower income, poor health, reduced political participation and even diminished trust in others.

Education often widens rather than closes the gap between high and low achievers, a phenomenon known as the . Those who start with an advantage, such as being able to read more words when starting school, tend to pull further ahead. Stronger educational achievement has been also associated with socioeconomic status, higher motivation and greater engagement with material learned during a class.

, such as genes, , and chemical signaling, have been shown in some studies to play a stronger role in learning outcomes than environmental ones. This has been well-documented in different areas, including math, where differences in biology may explain educational achievements.

To explore this question, we recruited 72 (18–30 years old) and taught them new math calculation techniques over five days. Some received a placebo treatment. Others received (tRNS), which delivers gentle electrical currents to the brain. It is painless and often imperceptible, unless you focus hard to try and sense it.

It is possible tRNS may cause long term side effects, but in previous studies my team assessed participants for cognitive side effects and found no evidence for it.

Participants who received tRNS were randomly assigned to receive it in one of two different brain areas. Some received it over the , a region critical for memory, attention, or when we acquire a new cognitive skill. Others had tRNS over the , which processes math information, mainly when the learning has been accomplished.

Before and after the training, we also scanned their brains and measured levels of key neurochemicals such as (gaba), , in a 2021 study, to play a role in brain plasticity and learning, including math.

Some participants started with weaker connections between the prefrontal and parietal brain regions, a biological profile that is associated with poorer learning. The study results showed these participants made significant gains in learning when they received tRNS over the .

Stimulation helped them catch up with peers who had stronger natural connectivity. This finding shows the critical role of the prefrontal cortex in learning and could help reduce educational inequalities that are grounded in neurobiology.

How does this work? One explanation lies in a principle called . This is when a weak signal becomes clearer when a small amount of random noise is added.

In the brain, tRNS may enhance learning by gently boosting the activity of underperforming neurons, helping them get closer to the point at which they become active and send signals. This is a point known as the "firing threshold," especially in people whose is suboptimal for a task like learning.

It is important to note what this technique does not do. It does not make the best learners even better. That is what makes this approach promising for bridging gaps,not widening them. This form of brain stimulation helps level the playing field.

Our study focused on healthy, high-performing university students. But in similar studies on children with (2017) and with (2023) my colleagues and I found tRNS seemed to improve their learning and performance in cognitive training.

I argue our findings could open a new direction in education. The biology of the learner matters, and with advances in knowledge and technology, we can develop tools that act on the brain directly, not just work around it. This could give more people the chance to get the best benefit from education.

In time, perhaps interventions like tRNS could support learners who are being left behind not because of poor teaching or personal circumstances, but because of natural differences in how their brains work.

Of course, very often education systems aren't operating to their full potential because of inadequate resources, social disadvantage or systemic barriers. And so any brain-based tools must go hand-in-hand with efforts to tackle these obstacles.

More information: George Zacharopoulos et al, Functional connectivity and GABAergic signaling modulate the enhancement effect of neurostimulation on mathematical learning, PLOS Biology (2025).

Journal information: PLoS Biology

Provided by The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .The Conversation

Citation: Could electric brain stimulation lead to better math skills? (2025, July 2) retrieved 5 July 2025 from /news/2025-07-electric-brain-math-skills.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Parents' fear of math linked to lower achievement in children

1 shares

Feedback to editors