arshadk writes with this excerpt from the BBC about  researchers at Oxford University who found that inducing a small current  in a subject's parietal lobe boosted their capacity for numerical learning: "The current could not be felt, and had no measurable effect on other  brain functions. As it was turned on, the volunteers tried to learn a  puzzle which involved substituting numbers for symbols. Those given the  current from right to left across the parietal lobe did significantly  better when given, compared to those who were given no electrical  stimulation. The direction of the current was important — those given  stimulation running in the opposite direction, left to right, did  markedly worse at these puzzles than those given no current, with their  ability matching that of an average six-year-old. The effects were not  short-lived, either. When the volunteers whose performance improved was  re-tested six months later, the benefits appear to have persisted. There  was no wider effect on general maths ability in either group, just on the ability to complete the puzzles learned as the current was applied."
                
 
 
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