Abstract
Problem-solving can be facilitated with instructions or hints, which provide information about given problems. The proper amount of instruction that should be provided for learners is controversial. Research shows that tasks with intermediate difficulty induce the largest sense of accomplishment (SA), leading to an intrinsic motivation for learning. To investigate the effect of instructions, we prepared three instruction levels (No hint, Indirect hint, and Direct hint) for the same insight-problem types. We hypothesized that indirect instructions impose intermediate difficulty for each individual, thereby inducing the greatest SA per person. Based on previous neuroimaging studies that showed involvement of the bilateral caudate in learning and motivation, we expected SA to be processed in this reward system. We recruited twenty-one participants, and investigated neural activations during problem solving by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). We confirmed that the Indirect hint, which imposed intermediate difficulty, induced the largest SA among the three instruction types. Using fMRI, we showed that activations in the bilateral caudate and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) were significantly modulated by SA. In the bilateral caudate, the indirect hint induced the largest activation, while the ACC seemed to reflect the difference between correct and incorrect trials. Importantly, such activation pattern was independent of notations (number or letter). Our results indicate that SA is represented in the reward system, and that the Indirect instruction effectively induces such sensation.
Highlights
Within the field of education science, there has been many discussions regarding the level of instruction that should be provided for students [1,2,3]
As subparts of the striatum, we examined activations in the ventral putamen and nucleus accumbens (NAcc), which were reportedly involved in the reward anticipation [18, 19]
Since the anatomical anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) region of interest (ROI) covers large areas, we examined two ROIs of 6 mm sphere from peak Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI) coordinates of pregenual ACC and subcallosal ACC from a previous study [27], which reported that the pACC is involved in reward-associated decision making, while the sACC is related to the resultant reward of the decision
Summary
Within the field of education science, there has been many discussions regarding the level of instruction that should be provided for students [1,2,3]. Proper instructions may change the subjective difficulty, even within the same problem, thereby encouraging students to be successful in problem solving. One such putative instruction strategy is the discovery learning strategy [2, 4], in which minimal instruction may encourage students to discover knowledge by themselves, rendering them intrinsically motivated to learn. Several studies have claimed that direct instruction, which provides sufficient information regarding concepts.
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