Abstract

Prefrontal anodal transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) has been proposed as a potential approach to improve inhibitory control performance. The functional consequences of tDCS during inhibition tasks remain, however, largely unresolved. We addressed this question by analyzing functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) recorded while participants completed a Go/NoGo task after right-lateralized prefrontal anodal tDCS with a crossover, sham-controlled, double-blind experimental design. We replicated previous evidence for an absence of offline effect of anodal stimulation on Go/NoGo performance. The fMRI results revealed a larger increase in right ventrolateral prefrontal activity for Go than NoGo trials in the anodal than sham condition. This pattern suggests that tDCS-induced increases in cortical excitability have larger effects on fMRI activity in regions with a lower task-related engagement. This was the case for the right prefrontal cortex in the Go condition in our task because while reactive inhibition was not engaged during execution trials, the unpredictability of the demand for inhibitory control still incited an engagement of proactive inhibition. Exploratory analyses further revealed that right prefrontal stimulation interacted with task-related functional demands in the supplementary motor area and the thalamus. Our collective results emphasize the dependency of offline tDCS functional effects on the task-related engagement of the stimulated areas and suggest that this factor might partly account for the discrepancies in the functional effects of tDCS observed in previous studies.

Highlights

  • Inhibitory control refers to the ability to suppress irrelevant cognitive or motor responses [1]

  • Current functional literature indicates that motor inhibitory control is supported by right inferior frontal gyrus and pre-supplementary motor areas, which suppress thalamocortical motor programs via their projections to the subthalamic nuclei (e.g. [2,3,4])

  • In line with these findings, transcranial direct current stimulation studies report that modulations of ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (VLPFC) excitability can improve inhibition performance [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]

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Summary

Introduction

Inhibitory control refers to the ability to suppress irrelevant cognitive or motor responses [1]. Current functional literature indicates that motor inhibitory control is supported by right inferior frontal gyrus (rIFG) and pre-supplementary motor areas (preSMA), which suppress thalamocortical motor programs via their projections to the subthalamic nuclei [2,3,4]) In line with these findings, transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) studies report that modulations of ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (VLPFC) excitability can improve inhibition performance [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. Jacobson and colleagues [7] for instance report shorter stop signal reaction times (SSRT) after excitatory anodal than sham tDCS over the rIFG during a stop-signal task

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