High‐definition transcranial direct current stimulation of the parietal cortices modulates the neural dynamics underlying verbal working memory

Author:

Arif Yasra1,Song Richard W.12,Springer Seth D.13,John Jason A.1,Embury Christine M.1,Killanin Abraham D.13,Son Jake J.13,Okelberry Hannah J.1,McDonald Kellen M.14ORCID,Picci Giorgia1ORCID,Wilson Tony W.134ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Human Neuroscience Boys Town National Research Hospital Boys Town Nebraska USA

2. Vanderbilt University Nashville Tennessee USA

3. College of Medicine, University of Nebraska Medical Center (UNMC) Omaha Nebraska USA

4. Department of Pharmacology & Neuroscience Creighton University Omaha Nebraska USA

Abstract

AbstractVerbal working memory (vWM) is an essential limited‐capacity cognitive system that spans the fronto‐parietal network and utilizes the subprocesses of encoding, maintenance, and retrieval. With the recent widespread use of noninvasive brain stimulation techniques, multiple recent studies have examined whether such stimulation may enhance cognitive abilities such as vWM, but the findings to date remain unclear in terms of both behavior and critical brain regions. In the current study, we applied high‐definition direct current stimulation to the left and right parietal cortices of 39 healthy adults in three separate sessions (left anodal, right anodal, and sham). Following stimulation, participants completed a vWM task during high‐density magnetoencephalography (MEG). Significant neural responses at the sensor‐level were imaged using a beamformer and whole‐brain ANOVAs were used to identify the specific neuromodulatory effects of the stimulation conditions on neural responses serving distinct phases of vWM. We found that right stimulation had a faciliatory effect relative to left stimulation and sham on theta oscillations during encoding in the right inferior frontal, while the opposite pattern was observed for left supramarginal regions. Stimulation also had a faciliatory effect on theta in occipital regions and alpha in temporal regions regardless of the laterality of stimulation. In summary, our data suggest that parietal HD‐tDCS both facilitates and interferes with neural responses underlying both the encoding and maintenance phases of vWM. Future studies are warranted to determine whether specific tDCS parameters can be tuned to accentuate the facilitation responses and attenuate the interfering aspects.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

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