Abstract

The present research proposal focuses on the search for the relation-ship between self-efficacy in mathematics, performance in mathematical tests, cognitive function during solving mathematical problems, and characteristics of the participants. The purpose of this study is to clarify the role of neurocognitive findings in the interpretation of perceived mathematical self-efficacy and, in addition, to investigate to what extent can neurophysiological data complement findings from socio-cognitive research and thus enrich general cognitive theories for mathematics education. The proposed research will use data from different datasets (questionnaire, neurophysiological, and biometric measurements). For the EEG measures the MUSE 2 portable EEG system will be used. The proposed study attempts to investigate (a) if there is a correlation between overall math self-efficacy scores and brain function during math problem-solving, (b) if there is a correlation between high self-efficacy and high math test performance, and (c) how math self-efficacy relates to participants' demographic characteristics and perceived math self-efficacy before and after the experiment.

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