4.3 Article

Frontoparietal theta tACS nonselectively enhances encoding, maintenance, and retrieval stages in visuospatial working memory

Journal

NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH
Volume 172, Issue -, Pages 41-50

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.neures.2021.05.005

Keywords

Transcranial alternating current; stimulation (tACS); Electric brain stimulation; Transcranial direct current stimulation; Neural oscillation; Neural entrainment; Working memory

Categories

Funding

  1. Taiwan's Ministry of Science and Technology [MOST 108-2410-H-038-009, MOST 109-2423-H-038-001-MY4]
  2. Higher Education Sprout Project from Ministry of Education to Taipei Medical University

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Research indicates that both theta tACS and retro-cues have significant effects on visual working memory performance, with no interaction between the two factors. Low performers benefit more from tACS, and faster memory decay in the second half of the retention stage may be a key factor in poor visual working memory performance.
Neurobiological and cognitive evidence suggests that working memory is processed through three distinctive and well-characterized phases: encoding, maintenance, and retrieval. Several studies have reported that applying theta transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) to the right prefrontal and parietal cortices can significantly improve visual working memory performance. However, it remains unclear whether the facilitative effect of tACS on visual working memory is due to a domain-general or stage-specific process. In this study, we combined pre-task right frontoparietal theta tACS (6 Hz, 15 min) with a stage-specific change detection paradigm that provided retro-cues during various stages of working memory. This stage-specific tagging via the use of retro-cues enabled us to probe whether theta tACS would create a nonspecific/additive effect that is equal in magnitude across all cognitive stages or would create a stage-specific effect that is interactive with the retro-cue in a particular stage (e.g., maintenance, retrieval). We observed significant retro-cue and theta tACS effects on visual working memory performance, but no interaction between them. This finding suggests that the aforementioned two factors can facilitate visual working memory processing independently in an additive manner. Furthermore, low performers benefited more from tACS, and their VWM deficit seemed to have originated from the second half of the memory retention stage, which possibly suggests faster memory decay as the key to poor VWM performance. Together, we conclude that frontoparietal theta tACS likely creates a domain-general boost in visual attention, which in turn benefits overall visual working memory processes that are not specific to the information maintenance or retrieval stages. (c) 2021 Elsevier B.V. and Japan Neuroscience Society. All rights reserved.

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