Abstract

For ages, we have been looking for ways to enhance our physical and cognitive capacities in order to augment our security. One potential way to enhance our capacities may be to externally stimulate the brain. Methods of non-invasive brain stimulation (NIBS), such as repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) and transcranial electrical stimulation (tES), have been recently developed to modulate brain activity. Both techniques are relatively safe and can transiently modify motor and cognitive functions outlasting the stimulation period. The purpose of this paper is to review data suggesting that NIBS can enhance motor and cognitive performance in healthy volunteers. We frame these findings in the context of whether they may serve security purposes. Specifically, we review studies reporting that NIBS induces paradoxical facilitation in motor (precision, speed, strength, acceleration endurance, and execution of daily motor task) and cognitive functions (attention, impulsive behavior, risk-taking, working memory, planning, and deceptive capacities). Although transferability and meaningfulness of these NIBS-induced paradoxical facilitations into real-life situations are not clear yet, NIBS may contribute at improving training of motor and cognitive functions relevant for military, civil, and forensic security services. This is an enthusiastic perspective that also calls for fair and open debates on the ethics of using NIBS in healthy individuals to enhance normal functions.

Highlights

  • We have been trying to improve our motor and cognitive performance in order to augment our security against predators, including our fellow human beings

  • The goal of this paper is to review data indicating that non-invasive brain stimulation (NIBS) can promote motor and cognitive functions in healthy volunteers

  • ARE NIBS-INDUCED PARADOXICAL FACILITATIONS MEANINGFUL FOR REAL-LIFE SITUATIONS? Throughout this paper we presented studies showing paradoxical facilitation induced by NIBS on various motor and cognitive functions

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Summary

Introduction

We have been trying to improve our motor and cognitive performance in order to augment our security against predators, including our fellow human beings. Two of the modern non-invasive brain stimulation (NIBS) methods are the repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS; for a review see Sandrini et al, 2011) and the recently re-discovered transcranial Electrical Stimulation (tES; for a review see Utz et al, 2010; Jacobson et al, 2012). They are widely used in cognitive neuroscience to study and modulate human behaviors in pathological and normal conditions. Paradoxical facilitation was first described in patients with brain lesions who performed better than normal subjects on certain tasks (for a review see Kapur, 1996).

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