gifted children
Using EEG Features and Machine Learning to Predict Gifted Children
Ghali, Ramla (Université de Montréal) | Tato, Ange (Université de Montréal) | Nkambou, Roger (Université de Montréal)
Gifted students have a higher capabilities of understanding and learning. They are characterized by a high level of attention and a high performance in the classroom. Gifted children are defined in this paper as children who have a performance higher than the average group (59.64%). In order to predict gifted students from normal students, we conducted an experiment where 17 pupils have voluntarily participated in this study. We collected different types of data (gender, age, performance, initial average in math and EEG mental states) in a web platform to learn mathematics called NetMath. Participants were invited to respond to top-level exercises on the four basic operations in decimals. We trained different machine learning algorithms to predict gifted students. Our first results show that the decision tree could predict gifted students with an accuracy of 76.88%. Using J48 trees, we noticed also that two relevant features could determine gifted children: the relaxation extracted from EEG headset and the characteristic of strong student. A strong student is defined as a student who obtained a mean higher than the group’s mean in the first step evaluation in class.
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How to raise a genius: lessons from a 45-year study of super-smart children
On a summer day in 1968, professor Julian Stanley met a brilliant but bored 12-year-old named Joseph Bates. The Baltimore student was so far ahead of his classmates in mathematics that his parents had arranged for him to take a computer-science course at Johns Hopkins University, where Stanley taught. Having leapfrogged ahead of the adults in the class, the child kept himself busy by teaching the FORTRAN programming language to graduate students. Unsure of what to do with Bates, his computer instructor introduced him to Stanley, a researcher well known for his work in psychometrics -- the study of cognitive performance. To discover more about the young prodigy's talent, Stanley gave Bates a battery of tests that included the SAT college-admissions exam, normally taken by university-bound 16- to 18-year-olds in the United States. Bates's score was well above the threshold for admission to Johns Hopkins, and prompted Stanley to search for a local high school that would let the child take advanced mathematics and science classes.
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- Research Report > New Finding (0.68)
- Instructional Material > Course Syllabus & Notes (0.48)
- Education > Focused Education > Gifted Children (1.00)
- Education > Educational Setting (1.00)
How to Raise a Genius: Lessons from a 45-Year Study of Supersmart Children
On a summer day in 1968, professor Julian Stanley met a brilliant but bored 12-year-old named Joseph Bates. The Baltimore student was so far ahead of his classmates in mathematics that his parents had arranged for him to take a computer-science course at Johns Hopkins University, where Stanley taught. Having leapfrogged ahead of the adults in the class, the child kept himself busy by teaching the FORTRAN programming language to graduate students. Unsure of what to do with Bates, his computer instructor introduced him to Stanley, a researcher well known for his work in psychometrics--the study of cognitive performance. To discover more about the young prodigy's talent, Stanley gave Bates a battery of tests that included the SAT college-admissions exam, normally taken by university-bound 16- to 18-year-olds in the United States.
- North America > United States > Tennessee > Davidson County > Nashville (0.04)
- North America > United States > Pennsylvania > Allegheny County > Pittsburgh (0.04)
- North America > United States > Ohio > Cuyahoga County > Cleveland (0.04)
- (15 more...)
- Research Report > New Finding (0.68)
- Instructional Material > Course Syllabus & Notes (0.48)
- Education > Focused Education > Gifted Children (1.00)
- Education > Assessment & Standards (0.89)
- Education > Educational Setting > Higher Education (0.70)