Events

Past Event

Educating the Brain: How the Acquisition of Reading and Mathematics Affects Human Brain Circuits

December 4, 2017
4:15 PM - 6:15 PM
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Columbia University, Italian Academy, 1161 Amsterdam Avenue, New York, NY 10027

The remarkable plasticity of the human brain allows it to acquire new abilities through schooling and education. Reading acquisition recycles several pre-existing visual and auditory areas in order to reorient them to the processing of letters and phonemes. Comparisons of literate and illiterate brains have revealed three major sites of enhancement due to schooling: the early visual cortex, the « visual word form area » (a region specializing for the visual recognition of letter strings) and the planum temporale (a region involved in phonological processing). Dr. Stanislas Dehaene will present a novel longitudinal study in which individual children were repeatedly scanned every two months during the first year of school. The results paint a detailed picture of how the ventral visual cortex and associated language areas are changed, and how reading acquisition competes with the cortical representation of faces. Dr. Dehaene will also show how mathematics affects brain activity, particularly by enhancing the responsivity to numbers and mathematical expressions in ventral visual cortex.

Speaker and respondents will discuss the implications of this work and how our growing understanding of the neuroscience of reading and mathematics may have important consequences for education and other fields.

Free and open to the public, but RSVP is required via Eventbrite. This event is part of the Seminars in Society and Neuroscience series.

Featuring an introduction from Eric R. Kandel, University Professor, Director of the Kavli Institute for Brain Science, and Co-Director of the Zuckerman Institute, Columbia University

Speaker:
Stanislas Dehaene, Professor and Chair of Experimental Cognitive Psychology, Collège de France

Respondents:
Thomas A. DiPrete, Giddings Professor of Sociology, Columbia University
Kimberly Noble, Associate Professor of Neuroscience and Education, Teachers College, Columbia University
Daphna Shohamy, Associate Professor of Psychology, Columbia University

Moderator:
Aniruddha Das, Associate Professor of Neuroscience, Columbia University

Stanislas Dehaene, Professor and Chair of Experimental Cognitive Psychology, Collège de France

Thomas A. DiPrete, Giddings Professor of Sociology, Columbia University

Kimberly Noble, Associate Professor of Neuroscience and Education, Teachers College, Columbia University

Daphna Shohamy, Associate Professor of Psychology, Columbia University

Panel Discussion