4.4 Article

Frequency-specific insight into short-term memory capacity

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 116, Issue 1, Pages 153-158

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.01080.2015

Keywords

digit span; short-term memory; posterior parietal lobe; transcranial alternating current stimulation; beta frequency

Funding

  1. Russian Academic Excellence Project [5-100]

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The digit span is one of the most widely used memory tests in clinical and experimental neuropsychology for reliably measuring short-term memory capacity. In the forward version, sequences of digits of increasing length have to be reproduced in the order in which they are presented, whereas in the backward version items must be reproduced in the reversed order. Here, we assessed whether transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) increases the memory span for digits of young and midlife adults. Imperceptibly weak electrical currents in the alpha (10 Hz), beta (20 Hz), theta (5 Hz), and gamma (40 Hz) range, as well as a sham stimulation, were delivered over the left posterior parietal cortex, a cortical region thought to sustain maintenance processes in short-term memory through oscillatory brain activity in the beta range. We showed a frequency-specific effect of beta-tACS that robustly increased the forward memory span of young, but not middle-aged, healthy individuals. The effect correlated with age: the younger the subjects, the greater the benefit arising from parietal beta stimulation. Our results provide evidence of a short-term memory capacity improvement in young adults by online frequency-specific tACS application.

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