Saturday, December 13, 2025
ADVT 
Life

Know Why Some People Are Slow Learners

Darpan News Desk IANS, 12 Apr, 2015 01:08 PM
    Why are some people able to master a new skill quickly while others take longer? That is because the neural activity in quick learners is different from that in slow learners, reveals a study.
     
    The findings suggest that recruiting unnecessary parts of the brain for a given task -- similar to thinking over a problem -- plays a critical role in this important difference.
     
    "It's useful to think of your brain as housing a very large toolkit," said lead researcher professor Scott Grafton from University of California Santa Barbara.
     
    "When you start to learn a challenging new skill, such as playing a musical instrument, your brain uses many different tools in a desperate attempt to produce anything remotely close to music."
     
    "With time and practice, fewer tools are needed and core motor areas are able to support most of the behaviour," he explained.
     
    However, beyond a certain amount of practice, some of these cognitive tools might actually be getting in the way of further learning, the researchers found.
     
    The study participants played a simple game while their brains were scanned with fMRI.
     
    The technique measures neural activity by tracking the flow of blood in the brain, highlighting which regions are involved in a given task.
     
    Surprisingly, the participants who showed decreased neural activity learned the fastest.
     
    The critical distinction was seen in the frontal cortex and the anterior cingulate cortex -- thought to be most critical for executive function.
     
    "In fact, good executive function is necessary for complex tasks but might actually be a hindrance to mastering simple ones," Grafton said.
     
    Grafton also said that the frontal cortex and the anterior cingulate cortex are among the last brain regions to fully develop in humans, which may help explain why children are able to acquire new skills quickly as compared to adults.
     
    "People who can turn off the communication to these parts of their brain are the quickest in their completion times," said lead author Danielle Bassett from University of Pennsylvania.
     
    The findings were published online in Nature Neuroscience.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Women have higher risk of injury than men post-drinking

    Women have higher risk of injury than men post-drinking

    Woman who find alcohol hard to resist even after three standard drinks are more likely to suffer ...

    Women have higher risk of injury than men post-drinking

    Find Out! If Your Husband Is Two Timing You?

    Find Out! If Your Husband Is Two Timing You?
    Although husband wife relationship is one such bond which flourish in the soil of trust and loyalty. But if we talk about the ongoing epoch then even infidelity is one of the conspicuous and caustic truths prevailing in present day marital bonds. 

    Find Out! If Your Husband Is Two Timing You?

    Globetrotting Travel Writer Pico Iyer's New Book 'Art Of Stillness' Makes Case For Staying Put

    Globetrotting Travel Writer Pico Iyer's New Book 'Art Of Stillness' Makes Case For Staying Put
    RIO DE JANEIRO — Pico Iyer has spent the past several decades on the move, incessantly hopping from one far-flung destination — Ethiopia, Morocco, Indonesia — to another. But the globetrotting travel writer is now convinced the most exciting place to go is nowhere at all.

    Globetrotting Travel Writer Pico Iyer's New Book 'Art Of Stillness' Makes Case For Staying Put

    Hotels Try To Speed Guests Through Check-in Process; Smartphones Are Being Used As Room Keys

    Hotels Try To Speed Guests Through Check-in Process; Smartphones Are Being Used As Room Keys
    New programs are helping speed up the check-in process for busy travellers, or in at least one case, letting them go straight to their rooms by using their smartphone to unlock doors.

    Hotels Try To Speed Guests Through Check-in Process; Smartphones Are Being Used As Room Keys

    Have you crossed the five stages of love?

    Have you crossed the five stages of love?
    Researchers have identified five stages of love, which would decide whether you would be able to cement the relationship or leave midway....

    Have you crossed the five stages of love?

    Online daters not looking for inter-racial love

    Online daters not looking for inter-racial love
    Online daters are not looking for love outside their cultural background, reveals a study, adding that women are significantly more likely than men to prefer...

    Online daters not looking for inter-racial love