Cargando…

Mindfulness-based training with transcranial direct current stimulation modulates neuronal resource allocation in working memory: A randomized pilot study with a nonequivalent control group

Mindfulness-based training (MBT) and transcranial electrical stimulation (TES) methods such as direct current stimulation (tDCS) have demonstrated promise for the augmentation of cognitive abilities. The current study investigated the potential compatibility of concurrent “electrical” MBT and tDCS (...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hunter, Michael A., Lieberman, Gregory, Coffman, Brian A., Trumbo, Michael C., Armenta, Mikaela L., Robinson, Charles S.H., Bezdek, Matthew A., O'Sickey, Anthony J., Jones, Aaron P., Romero, Victoria, Elkin-Frankston, Seth, Gaurino, Sean, Eusebi, Leonard, Schumacher, Eric H., Witkiewitz, Katie, Clark, Vincent P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6077241/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30094362
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2018.e00685
_version_ 1783344869086855168
author Hunter, Michael A.
Lieberman, Gregory
Coffman, Brian A.
Trumbo, Michael C.
Armenta, Mikaela L.
Robinson, Charles S.H.
Bezdek, Matthew A.
O'Sickey, Anthony J.
Jones, Aaron P.
Romero, Victoria
Elkin-Frankston, Seth
Gaurino, Sean
Eusebi, Leonard
Schumacher, Eric H.
Witkiewitz, Katie
Clark, Vincent P.
author_facet Hunter, Michael A.
Lieberman, Gregory
Coffman, Brian A.
Trumbo, Michael C.
Armenta, Mikaela L.
Robinson, Charles S.H.
Bezdek, Matthew A.
O'Sickey, Anthony J.
Jones, Aaron P.
Romero, Victoria
Elkin-Frankston, Seth
Gaurino, Sean
Eusebi, Leonard
Schumacher, Eric H.
Witkiewitz, Katie
Clark, Vincent P.
author_sort Hunter, Michael A.
collection PubMed
description Mindfulness-based training (MBT) and transcranial electrical stimulation (TES) methods such as direct current stimulation (tDCS) have demonstrated promise for the augmentation of cognitive abilities. The current study investigated the potential compatibility of concurrent “electrical” MBT and tDCS (or eMBT) by testing its combined effects on behavioral and neurophysiological indices of working memory (WM) and attentional resource allocation. Thirty-four healthy participants were randomly assigned to either a MBT task with tDCS group (eMBT) or an active control training task with sham tDCS (Control) group. Training lasted 4-weeks, with up to twenty MBT sessions and with up to eight of those sessions that were eMBT sessions. Electroencephalography was acquired during varying WM load conditions using the n-back task (1-, 2-, 3-back), along with performance on complex WM span tasks (operation and symmetry span) and fluid intelligence measures (Ravens and Shipley) before and after training. Improved performance was observed only on the 3-back and spatial span tasks for eMBT but not the Control group. During 3-back performance in the eMBT group, an increase in P3 amplitude and theta power at electrode site Pz was also observed, along with a simultaneous decrease in frontal midline P3 amplitude and theta power compared to the Control group. These results are consistent with the neural efficiency hypothesis, where higher cognitive capacity was associated with more distributed brain activity (i.e., increase in parietal and decrease in frontal amplitudes). Future longitudinal studies are called upon to further examine the direct contributions of tDCS on MBT by assessing the differential effects of electrode montage, polarity, current strength and a direct contrast between the eMBT and MBT conditions on performance and neuroimaging outcome data. While preliminary, the current results provided evidence for the potential compatibility of using eMBT to modulate WM capacity through the allocation of attention and its neurophysiological correlates.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6077241
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Elsevier
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-60772412018-08-09 Mindfulness-based training with transcranial direct current stimulation modulates neuronal resource allocation in working memory: A randomized pilot study with a nonequivalent control group Hunter, Michael A. Lieberman, Gregory Coffman, Brian A. Trumbo, Michael C. Armenta, Mikaela L. Robinson, Charles S.H. Bezdek, Matthew A. O'Sickey, Anthony J. Jones, Aaron P. Romero, Victoria Elkin-Frankston, Seth Gaurino, Sean Eusebi, Leonard Schumacher, Eric H. Witkiewitz, Katie Clark, Vincent P. Heliyon Article Mindfulness-based training (MBT) and transcranial electrical stimulation (TES) methods such as direct current stimulation (tDCS) have demonstrated promise for the augmentation of cognitive abilities. The current study investigated the potential compatibility of concurrent “electrical” MBT and tDCS (or eMBT) by testing its combined effects on behavioral and neurophysiological indices of working memory (WM) and attentional resource allocation. Thirty-four healthy participants were randomly assigned to either a MBT task with tDCS group (eMBT) or an active control training task with sham tDCS (Control) group. Training lasted 4-weeks, with up to twenty MBT sessions and with up to eight of those sessions that were eMBT sessions. Electroencephalography was acquired during varying WM load conditions using the n-back task (1-, 2-, 3-back), along with performance on complex WM span tasks (operation and symmetry span) and fluid intelligence measures (Ravens and Shipley) before and after training. Improved performance was observed only on the 3-back and spatial span tasks for eMBT but not the Control group. During 3-back performance in the eMBT group, an increase in P3 amplitude and theta power at electrode site Pz was also observed, along with a simultaneous decrease in frontal midline P3 amplitude and theta power compared to the Control group. These results are consistent with the neural efficiency hypothesis, where higher cognitive capacity was associated with more distributed brain activity (i.e., increase in parietal and decrease in frontal amplitudes). Future longitudinal studies are called upon to further examine the direct contributions of tDCS on MBT by assessing the differential effects of electrode montage, polarity, current strength and a direct contrast between the eMBT and MBT conditions on performance and neuroimaging outcome data. While preliminary, the current results provided evidence for the potential compatibility of using eMBT to modulate WM capacity through the allocation of attention and its neurophysiological correlates. Elsevier 2018-07-11 /pmc/articles/PMC6077241/ /pubmed/30094362 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2018.e00685 Text en © 2018 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Hunter, Michael A.
Lieberman, Gregory
Coffman, Brian A.
Trumbo, Michael C.
Armenta, Mikaela L.
Robinson, Charles S.H.
Bezdek, Matthew A.
O'Sickey, Anthony J.
Jones, Aaron P.
Romero, Victoria
Elkin-Frankston, Seth
Gaurino, Sean
Eusebi, Leonard
Schumacher, Eric H.
Witkiewitz, Katie
Clark, Vincent P.
Mindfulness-based training with transcranial direct current stimulation modulates neuronal resource allocation in working memory: A randomized pilot study with a nonequivalent control group
title Mindfulness-based training with transcranial direct current stimulation modulates neuronal resource allocation in working memory: A randomized pilot study with a nonequivalent control group
title_full Mindfulness-based training with transcranial direct current stimulation modulates neuronal resource allocation in working memory: A randomized pilot study with a nonequivalent control group
title_fullStr Mindfulness-based training with transcranial direct current stimulation modulates neuronal resource allocation in working memory: A randomized pilot study with a nonequivalent control group
title_full_unstemmed Mindfulness-based training with transcranial direct current stimulation modulates neuronal resource allocation in working memory: A randomized pilot study with a nonequivalent control group
title_short Mindfulness-based training with transcranial direct current stimulation modulates neuronal resource allocation in working memory: A randomized pilot study with a nonequivalent control group
title_sort mindfulness-based training with transcranial direct current stimulation modulates neuronal resource allocation in working memory: a randomized pilot study with a nonequivalent control group
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6077241/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30094362
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2018.e00685
work_keys_str_mv AT huntermichaela mindfulnessbasedtrainingwithtranscranialdirectcurrentstimulationmodulatesneuronalresourceallocationinworkingmemoryarandomizedpilotstudywithanonequivalentcontrolgroup
AT liebermangregory mindfulnessbasedtrainingwithtranscranialdirectcurrentstimulationmodulatesneuronalresourceallocationinworkingmemoryarandomizedpilotstudywithanonequivalentcontrolgroup
AT coffmanbriana mindfulnessbasedtrainingwithtranscranialdirectcurrentstimulationmodulatesneuronalresourceallocationinworkingmemoryarandomizedpilotstudywithanonequivalentcontrolgroup
AT trumbomichaelc mindfulnessbasedtrainingwithtranscranialdirectcurrentstimulationmodulatesneuronalresourceallocationinworkingmemoryarandomizedpilotstudywithanonequivalentcontrolgroup
AT armentamikaelal mindfulnessbasedtrainingwithtranscranialdirectcurrentstimulationmodulatesneuronalresourceallocationinworkingmemoryarandomizedpilotstudywithanonequivalentcontrolgroup
AT robinsoncharlessh mindfulnessbasedtrainingwithtranscranialdirectcurrentstimulationmodulatesneuronalresourceallocationinworkingmemoryarandomizedpilotstudywithanonequivalentcontrolgroup
AT bezdekmatthewa mindfulnessbasedtrainingwithtranscranialdirectcurrentstimulationmodulatesneuronalresourceallocationinworkingmemoryarandomizedpilotstudywithanonequivalentcontrolgroup
AT osickeyanthonyj mindfulnessbasedtrainingwithtranscranialdirectcurrentstimulationmodulatesneuronalresourceallocationinworkingmemoryarandomizedpilotstudywithanonequivalentcontrolgroup
AT jonesaaronp mindfulnessbasedtrainingwithtranscranialdirectcurrentstimulationmodulatesneuronalresourceallocationinworkingmemoryarandomizedpilotstudywithanonequivalentcontrolgroup
AT romerovictoria mindfulnessbasedtrainingwithtranscranialdirectcurrentstimulationmodulatesneuronalresourceallocationinworkingmemoryarandomizedpilotstudywithanonequivalentcontrolgroup
AT elkinfrankstonseth mindfulnessbasedtrainingwithtranscranialdirectcurrentstimulationmodulatesneuronalresourceallocationinworkingmemoryarandomizedpilotstudywithanonequivalentcontrolgroup
AT gaurinosean mindfulnessbasedtrainingwithtranscranialdirectcurrentstimulationmodulatesneuronalresourceallocationinworkingmemoryarandomizedpilotstudywithanonequivalentcontrolgroup
AT eusebileonard mindfulnessbasedtrainingwithtranscranialdirectcurrentstimulationmodulatesneuronalresourceallocationinworkingmemoryarandomizedpilotstudywithanonequivalentcontrolgroup
AT schumachererich mindfulnessbasedtrainingwithtranscranialdirectcurrentstimulationmodulatesneuronalresourceallocationinworkingmemoryarandomizedpilotstudywithanonequivalentcontrolgroup
AT witkiewitzkatie mindfulnessbasedtrainingwithtranscranialdirectcurrentstimulationmodulatesneuronalresourceallocationinworkingmemoryarandomizedpilotstudywithanonequivalentcontrolgroup
AT clarkvincentp mindfulnessbasedtrainingwithtranscranialdirectcurrentstimulationmodulatesneuronalresourceallocationinworkingmemoryarandomizedpilotstudywithanonequivalentcontrolgroup