State-Dependent tACS Effects Reveal the Potential Causal Role of Prestimulus Alpha Traveling Waves in Visual Contrast Detection

Author:

Wei JinwenORCID,Alamia Andrea,Yao Ziqing,Huang Gan,Li Linling,Liang Zhen,Zhang Li,Zhou Changsong,Song Zhenxi,Zhang Zhiguo

Abstract

The intricate relationship between prestimulus alpha oscillations and visual contrast detection variability has been the focus of numerous studies. However, the causal impact of prestimulus alpha traveling waves on visual contrast detection remains largely unexplored. In our research, we sought to discern the causal link between prestimulus alpha traveling waves and visual contrast detection across different levels of mental fatigue. Using electroencephalography alongside a visual detection task with 30 healthy adults (13 females; 17 males), we identified a robust negative correlation between prestimulus alpha forward traveling waves (FTWs) and visual contrast threshold (VCT). Inspired by this correlation, we utilized 45/−45° phase-shifted transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) in a sham-controlled, double-blind, within–subject experiment with 33 healthy adults (23 females; 10 males) to directly modulate these alpha traveling waves. After the application of 45° phase-shifted tACS, we observed a substantial decrease in FTW and an increase in backward traveling waves, along with a concurrent increase in VCT, compared with the sham condition. These changes were particularly pronounced under a low fatigue state. The findings of state-dependent tACS effects reveal the potential causal role of prestimulus alpha traveling waves in visual contrast detection. Moreover, our study highlights the potential of 45/−45° phase-shifted tACS in cognitive modulation and therapeutic applications.

Funder

MOST | National Natural Science Foundation of China

Shenzhen-Hong Kong Institue of Brain Science-Shenzhen Fundamental Research Institutions

Shenzhen's Sanming Project of Medicine

Shenzhen Soft Science Research Program Project

Publisher

Society for Neuroscience

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