The effects of prefrontal tDCS on working memory associate with the magnitude of the individual electric field in the brain

Author:

Razza Lais B.ORCID,De Smet StefanieORCID,Van Hoornweder SybrenORCID,De Witte SaraORCID,Luethi Matthias S.ORCID,Baeken ChrisORCID,Brunoni Andre R.ORCID,Vanderhasselt Marie-AnneORCID

Abstract

AbstractTranscranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) over the prefrontal cortex has the potential to enhance working memory by means of a weak direct current applied to the scalp. However, its effects are highly variable and possibly dependent on individual variability in cortical architecture and head anatomy. Unveiling sources of heterogeneity might improve fundamental and clinical application of tDCS in the field. Therefore, we investigated sources of tDCS variability of prefrontal 1.5mA tDCS, 3mA tDCS and sham tDCS in 40 participants (67.5% women, mean age 24.7 years) by associating simulated electric field (E-field) magnitude in brain regions of interest (dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and subgenual ACC) and working memory performance. Emotional and non-emotional 3-back paradigms were used. In the tDCS protocol analysis, effects were only significant for the 3mA group, and only for the emotional tasks. In the individual E-field magnitude analysis, faster responses in non-emotional, but not in the emotional task, were associated with stronger E-fields in all brain regions of interest. A follow-up analysis showed that people with higher (vs. lower) E-fields magnitude in the left DLPFC were faster in the both tasks, and more accurate in the emotional task. Concluding, individual E-field distribution might explain part of the variability of prefrontal tDCS effects on working memory performance and in clinical samples. Our results suggest that tDCS effects can be more consistent or improved by applying personalizing current intensity, although this hypothesis should be confirmed by further studies.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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