Brain imaging analysis technology now allows scientists to view brain scans during the stages of figuring out a math problem! There four different stages, and researchers are now set on reconstructing each stage, and the time it takes on each one. The experiment had men and women solve math problems while researchers viewed, through brain imaging analysis, the strategies applied and time taken. Particular attention was paid to math symbols and equations the subjects were completely unfamiliar with.

What Your Brain Looks Like When It Solves a Math Problem #dyscalculia
Medical scanning equipment can gauge the reaction of a person’s brain while doing math.
The researchers used two types of MRI scanning, and the subjects solved 88 problems each. This work is especially important, as the results can be used to create and design coursework and better learning techniques to be applied in classrooms. Though this research isn’t complete, it has left the developers with hopeful anticipation looking forward.
Now, using an innovative combination of brain-imaging analyses, researchers have captured four fleeting stages of creative thinking in math. In a paper published in Psychological Science, a team led by John R. Anderson, a professor of psychology and computer science at Carnegie Mellon University demonstrated a method for reconstructing how the brain moves from understanding a problem to solving it, including the time the brain spends in each stage.
"Key Takeaways:
Scientists have studied the brain and what it does while someone is solving a math problem.
This study will make a huge impact on how students learn and ways to better help educate them,
Different stages of the math problem take up different precedence, such as planning take much more time than execution.

