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Number sense is essential for early mathematical development but it is compromised in children with mathematical disabilities (MD). Here we investigate the impact of a personalized 4-week Integrated Number Sense (INS) tutoring program aimed at improving the connection between nonsymbolic (sets of objects) and symbolic (Arabic numerals) representations in children with MD. Utilizing neural pattern analysis, we found that INS tutoring not only improved cross-format mapping but also significantly boosted arithmetic fluency in children with MD. Critically, the tutoring normalized previously low levels of cross-format neural representations in these children to pre-tutoring levels observed in typically developing, especially in key brain regions associated with numerical cognition. Moreover, we identified distinct, ‘inverted U-shaped’ neurodevelopmental changes in the MD group, suggesting unique neural plasticity during mathematical skill development. Our findings highlight the effectiveness of targeted INS tutoring for remediating numerical deficits in MD, and offer a foundation for developing evidence-based educational interventions. Significance StatementFocusing on neural mechanisms, our study advances understanding of how numerical problem-solving can be enhanced in children with mathematical disabilities (MD). We evaluated an integrated number sense tutoring program designed to enhance connections between concrete (e.g. 2 dots) and symbolic (e.g. “2”) numerical representations. Remarkably, the tutoring program not only improved these children’s ability to process numbers similarly across formats but also enhanced their arithmetic skills, indicating transfer of learning to related domains. Importantly, tutoring normalized brain processing patterns in children with MD to resemble those of typically developing peers. These insights highlight the neural bases of successful interventions for MD, offering a foundation for developing targeted educational strategies that could markedly improve learning outcomes for children facing these challenges.more » « less
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Abstract Efficient memory-based problem-solving strategies are a cardinal feature of expertise across a wide range of cognitive domains in childhood. However, little is known about the neurocognitive mechanisms that underlie the acquisition of efficient memory-based problem-solving strategies. Here we develop, to the best of our knowledge, a novel neurocognitive process model of latent memory processes to investigate how cognitive training designed to improve children’s problem-solving skills alters brain network organization and leads to increased use and efficiency of memory retrieval-based strategies. We found that training increased both the use and efficiency of memory retrieval. Functional brain network analysis revealed training-induced changes in modular network organization, characterized by increase in network modules and reorganization of hippocampal-cortical circuits. Critically, training-related changes in modular network organization predicted performance gains, with emergent hippocampal, rather than parietal cortex, circuitry driving gains in efficiency of memory retrieval. Our findings elucidate a neurocognitive process model of brain network mechanisms that drive learning and gains in children’s efficient problem-solving strategies.more » « less
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