Abstract

Transcranial direct stimulation, a non-invasive neurostimulation technique for modulating cortical excitability, and yoga have both respectively been shown to positively affect cognition. While preliminary research has shown that combined transcranial direct stimulation and meditation may have synergistic effects on mood and cognition, this was the first study to explore the combination of transcranial direct stimulation and yoga. Twenty-two healthy volunteers with a regular yoga practice were randomized to receive either active transcranial direct stimulation (anodal left, cathodal right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex) followed by yoga intervention or sham transcranial direct stimulation followed by yoga intervention a double-blind, cross-over design over two separate intervention days. Outcome measures included working memory performance, measured with the n-back task and mindfulness state, measured with the Toronto Mindfulness Scale, and were conducted offline, with pre-post assessments. Twenty participants completed both days of the intervention. Active transcranial direct stimulation did not have a significant effect on working memory or levels of mindfulness. There was a significant placebo effect, with better performance on day 1 of the intervention, irrespective of whether participants received active or sham transcranial direct stimulation. There was no significant difference between active versus sham transcranial direct stimulation concerning working memory performance and mindfulness, which may be accounted by the small sample size, the transient nature of the intervention, the fact that yoga and transcranial direct stimulation concerning were not conducted simultaneously, and the specific site of stimulation.

Highlights

  • Over the last several decades, there has been a growing interest in the therapeutic benefits of meditation and yoga

  • In the present exploratory study, we investigated the effect of a single session of Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) coupled with a yoga intervention on working memory and mindfulness

  • We investigated the effect of active tDCS targeting the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) bilaterally, combined with yoga on measures of mindfulness and working memory performance in twenty healthy individuals

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Summary

Introduction

Over the last several decades, there has been a growing interest in the therapeutic benefits of meditation and yoga. In [30], a combination of meditation with 20minute tDCS, and the anode placed over the primary motor cortex (cathode placed contralaterally supraorbital), the intervention was found to help alleviate pain. Beyond these encouraging results, a recent study [31], exploring the effect of 30 minutes of tDCS with the anode placed over the left DLPFC, and the cathode over the contralateral upper arm, concurrently with loving-kindness meditation, found no difference between active vs sham tDCS on emotional processing. In the present exploratory study, we investigated the effect of a single session of tDCS coupled with a yoga intervention on working memory and mindfulness

Participants
Design
Procedure
Intervention
N-back task
Statistical analysis
Data overview
N-back
Mindfulness
Discussion
Conclusions
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