Horvath Jared Cooney, Carter Olivia, Forte Jason D
University of Melbourne, School of Psychological Sciences, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
University of Melbourne, School of Psychological Sciences, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Neuropsychologia. 2016 Oct;91:544-552. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2016.09.017. Epub 2016 Sep 21.
Research exploring the behavioral impact of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) over M1 has produced homogenous results. The most common explanations to address this homogeneity concerns the differential impact of varied tDCS parameters (such as stimulation intensity or electrode montage). To explore this, we systematically examined the effects of 15 different tDCS protocols on a well-elucidated neurobehavioral system: simple visual motor reaction time (smRT).
For the initial phase of this study, 150 healthy participants were randomly assigned to one of 5 experimental groups (2mA anodal, 2mA cathodal, 1mA anodal, 1mA cathodal, or sham) across 3 different conditions (orbitofrontal, bilateral, or extracephalic reference electrode location). The active electrode was always placed over M1 and tDCS lasted for 20min. Starting ~5min prior to stimulation and running continuously for ~30min, participants were repeatedly presented with a visual cue centered on a computer monitor and asked to press a response button as quickly as possible at stimulus onset (stimuli number: 100 pre-, 400 during-, and 100-post stimulation - interstimulus interval: 1-3s). Ex-gaussian distribution curves, miss, and error rates were determined for each normalized batch of 100 RTs and compared using a two-way ANOVA. As the largest group differences were seen with 2mA anodal (compared to sham) stimulation using an orbitofrontal montage, an additional 60 healthy participants were recruited to further test for significance in this condition.
No significant impact of tDCS was seen on any parameter of smRT distribution, error rate, or miss rate, regardless of polarity, stimulation intensity, electrode montage, or stimulation-to-task relationship.
Our results suggest that tDCS over M1 might not have a predictable or reliable effect on short duration smRT. Our results raise interesting questions regarding the mechanisms by which tDCS might modulate more complex motor behaviors. Additional research utilizing multiple tDCS protocols as undertaken here will help address and clarify these concerns.
探索经颅直流电刺激(tDCS)作用于初级运动皮层(M1)的行为影响的研究得出了一致的结果。针对这种一致性,最常见的解释涉及不同tDCS参数(如刺激强度或电极组合)的差异影响。为了探究这一点,我们系统地研究了15种不同tDCS方案对一个已充分阐明的神经行为系统的影响:简单视觉运动反应时间(smRT)。
在本研究的初始阶段,150名健康参与者被随机分配到5个实验组之一(2mA阳极、2mA阴极、1mA阳极、1mA阴极或假刺激),分3种不同条件(眶额、双侧或颅外参考电极位置)。活动电极始终置于M1上,tDCS持续20分钟。在刺激前约5分钟开始并持续约30分钟,参与者会在电脑显示器上反复看到以视觉提示为中心的画面,并被要求在刺激开始时尽快按下响应按钮(刺激次数:刺激前100次、刺激期间400次、刺激后100次 - 刺激间隔:1 - 3秒)。对每100个反应时间(RT)的标准化批次确定高斯分布曲线、漏报率和错误率,并使用双向方差分析进行比较。由于在使用眶额组合的2mA阳极(与假刺激相比)刺激中观察到最大的组间差异,因此又招募了60名健康参与者,以进一步测试这种情况下的显著性。
无论极性、刺激强度、电极组合或刺激与任务的关系如何,tDCS对smRT分布、错误率或漏报率的任何参数均无显著影响。
我们的结果表明,tDCS作用于M1可能对短持续时间的smRT没有可预测或可靠的影响。我们的结果引发了关于tDCS可能调节更复杂运动行为的机制的有趣问题。如本研究中所采用的利用多种tDCS方案的进一步研究将有助于解决和阐明这些问题。