Abstract

Recent advances in second-person neuroscience have allowed the underlying neural mechanisms involved in teaching-learning interactions to be better understood. Teaching is not merely a one-way transfer of information from teacher to student; it is a complex interaction that requires metacognitive and mentalizing skills to understand others’ intentions and integrate information regarding oneself and others. Physiotherapy involving therapists instructing patients on how to improve their motor skills is a clinical field in which teaching-learning interactions play a central role. Accumulating evidence suggests that non-invasive brain stimulation (NIBS) modulates cognitive functions; however, NIBS approaches to teaching-learning interactions are yet to be utilized in rehabilitation. In this review, I evaluate the present research into NIBS and its role in enhancing metacognitive and mentalizing abilities; I then review hyperscanning studies of teaching-learning interactions and explore the potential clinical applications of NIBS in rehabilitation. Dual-brain stimulation using NIBS has been developed based on findings of brain-to-brain synchrony in hyperscanning studies, and it is delivered simultaneously to two individuals to increase inter-brain synchronized oscillations at the stimulated frequency. Artificial induction of brain-to-brain synchrony has the potential to promote instruction-based learning. The brain-to-brain interface, which induces inter-brain synchronization by adjusting the patient’s brain activity, using NIBS, to the therapist’s brain activity, could have a positive effect on both therapist-patient interactions and rehabilitation outcomes. NIBS based on second-person neuroscience has the potential to serve as a useful addition to the current neuroscientific methods used in complementary interventions for rehabilitation.

Highlights

  • Teaching plays a central role in physiotherapy as physiotherapists instruct patients on how to improve their motor skills

  • This review explores the potential for applying non-invasive brain stimulation (NIBS) techniques in rehabilitation settings using second-person neuroscience approaches in teaching-learning interactions

  • Anodal transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) of the anterior prefrontal cortex (PFC) decreased participants’ judgments of learning accuracy in encoding high-frequency words relative to sham stimulation; these findings suggest that the role of the anterior PFC in the subjective level of confidence in metamemory varies according to task difficulty (Gaynor and Chua, 2019)

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Summary

Introduction

Teaching plays a central role in physiotherapy as physiotherapists instruct patients on how to improve their motor skills. NIBS approaches aimed at modulating metacognitive and mentalizing functions may enhance rehabilitation outcomes by facilitating therapist-patient interactions. Artificial induction of brain-to-brain synchrony may induce pro-social effects and enhance instruction-based learning.

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