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The effect of cathodal transcranial direct current stimulation during rapid eye-movement sleep on neutral and emotional memory

Version 2 2024-03-12, 16:38
Version 1 2024-03-01, 10:45
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 16:38 authored by Jennifer Johnson, Simon DurrantSimon Durrant
<p>Sleep-dependent memory consolidation has been extensively studied. Neutral declarative memories and serial reactiontime task (SRTT) performance can benefit from slow-wave activity, characterized by less than 1 Hz frequency corticalslow oscillations (SO). Emotional memories can benefit from theta activity, characterized by 4–8 Hz frequency corticaloscillations. Applying transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) during sleep entrains specific frequencies to alter sleep architecture. When applying cathodal tDCS (CtDCS), neural inhibition or excitation may depend on the waveform at the applied frequency. A double dissociation was predicted, with CtDCS at SO frequency improving neutral declarative memory and SRTT performance, and theta frequency CtDCS inhibiting negative emotional memory. Participants completed three CtDCS conditions (Theta: 5Hz, SO: 0.75 Hz and control: Sham) and completed an SRTT and word recognition task pre- and post-sleep, comprising emotional and neutral words to assess memory. In line with predictions, CtDCS improved neutral declarative memory when applied at SO frequency. When applied at theta frequency, no negative emotional word memory impairment was found but a positive association was found between post-stimulation theta power and emotional word recognition. SRTT performance was also not altered by either CtDCS frequency. Future studies should investigate overnight theta CtDCS and examine the effects of CtDCS during and after stimulation.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Psychology (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Royal Society Open Science

Volume

5

Issue

7

Pages/Article Number

172353

Publisher

Royal Society

ISSN

2054-5703

eISSN

2054-5703

Date Submitted

2018-07-17

Date Accepted

2018-06-13

Date of First Publication

2018-07-18

Date of Final Publication

2018-07-18

Date Document First Uploaded

2018-07-16

ePrints ID

32663

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