| Literature DB >> 25816233 |
Alberto Pisoni1, Zsolt Turi2, Almuth Raithel2, Géza Gergely Ambrus3, Ivan Alekseichuk2, Annekathrin Schacht4, Walter Paulus2, Andrea Antal2.
Abstract
There is emerging evidence from imaging studies that parietal and temporal cortices act together to achieve successful recognition of declarative information; nevertheless, the precise role of these regions remains elusive. To evaluate the role of these brain areas in declarative memory retrieval, we applied bilateral tDCS, with anode over the left and cathode over the right parietal or temporal cortices separately, during the recognition phase of a verbal learning paradigm using a balanced old-new decision task. In a parallel group design, we tested three different groups of healthy adults, matched for demographic and neurocognitive status: two groups received bilateral active stimulation of either the parietal or the temporal cortex, while a third group received sham stimulation. Accuracy, discriminability index (d') and reaction times of recognition memory performance were measurements of interest. The d' sensitivity index and accuracy percentage improved in both active stimulation groups, as compared with the sham one, while reaction times remained unaffected. Moreover, the analysis of accuracy revealed a different effect of tDCS for old and new item recognition. While the temporal group showed enhanced performance for old item recognition, the parietal group was better at correctly recognising new ones. Our results support an active role of both of these areas in memory retrieval, possibly underpinning different stages of the recognition process.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25816233 PMCID: PMC4376742 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0123085
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
The demographic data of the participants in the three independent study groups.
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The two lists were balanced on the most important psycholingusitic parameters, including the natural logarithm of word frequency, familiarity, letter and syllable length and word concreteness (according to the Wilcoxon signed-rank test).
| List 1 (mean, SD) | List 2 (mean, SD) | Wilcoxon test | |
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Fig 1The experimental procedure for the encoding A) and for the recognition B) phase of the verbal learning task.
Fig 2D’ values were significantly and marginally higher for the temporal and parietal groups respectively, compared with the sham stimulation group.
D’ value is zero at random choice. Error bars represent standard error of the mean. Asterisk indicates significant differences; the plus sign indicates marginally significant differences.
The summary of the fixed effects of the final model taking accuracy as dependent variable (N = 8448; log-likelihood = -5269.6).
| Predictor | Coefficient | SE | Z | p |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| .93 | .08 | 11.40 | <.001 |
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| .24 | .10 | 2.40 | .018 |
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| .05 | .10 | .50 | .63 |
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| -.19 | .10 | -1.90 | .05 |
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| -.25 | .09 | -2.60 | .009 |
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| -.58 | .07 | -8.78 | <.001 |
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| -.10 | .11 | -.91 | .36 |
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| .30 | .11 | 2.64 | .008 |
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| .41 | .11 | 3.55 | <.001 |
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| .38 | .09 | 4.11 | <.001 |
Note: Random effect for subject intercept had SD of 0.16. SE: standard error of mean.
Fig 3The mean accuracies (%) were significantly higher for both the parietal and the temporal groups compared with the sham stimulation group.
Error bars represent standard error of the mean. Asterisks indicate significant differences.
The summary of the fixed effects of the final model taking reaction-time as dependent variable (N = 5691; log-likelihood = -39621).
| Predictor | Coefficient | SE | df | t | P |
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| 1402.36 | 23.87 | 50 | 58.75 | <.001 |
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| -100.56 | 9.82 | 5657 | -10.24 | <.001 |
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| 66.76 | 9.74 | 5646 | 6.86 | <.001 |
Note: Random effect for subject intercept had SD of 148.7. SE: standard error of mean; df: degrees of freedom.
The summary of the fixed effects of the final model taking confidence rating as dependent variable (N = 7787; log-likelihood = 35888).
| Predictor | Coefficient | SE | df | t | P |
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| 72.86 | 3.55 | 48 | 20.54 | <.001 |
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| -7.92 | 5.14 | 49 | -1.54 | .13 |
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| -4.13 | 4.93 | 48 | -0.84 | .41 |
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| 3.79 | 5.06 | 49 | 0.75 | .13 |
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| 5.98 | 1.47 | 7750 | 4.07 | <.001 |
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| -7.66 | 1.68 | 7749 | -4.57 | <.001 |
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| 4.37 | 2.15 | 7744 | -2.03 | .04 |
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| -1.70 | 2.04 | 7748 | -.83 | .40 |
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| 2.67 | 2.12 | 7743 | 1.26 | .21 |
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| -3.16 | 2.47 | 7744 | -1.28 | .20 |
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| 1.29 | 2.41 | 7749 | .53 | .59 |
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| 4.45 | 2.51 | 7745 | 1.77 | .08 |
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| 14.64 | 2.07 | 7754 | 7.07 | <.001 |
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| 10.38 | 3 | 7748 | 3.46 | <.001 |
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| 2.92 | 2.93 | 7754 | .99 | .32 |
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| -7.47 | 3 | 7748 | -2.48 | .012 |
Note: Random effect for subject intercept had SD of 12.49. SE: standard error of mean; df: degrees of freedom.
Mean confidence level divided by Stimulation group, Item Type and Accuracy.
| Stimulation | Item type | Accuracy | Mean Confidency |
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| New | correct | 78,84 |
| incorrect | 72,86 | ||
| Old | correct | 85,82 | |
| incorrect | 65,20 | ||
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| New | correct | 66,54 |
| incorrect | 64,93 | ||
| Old | correct | 80,75 | |
| incorrect | 54,12 | ||
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| New | correct | 73,00 |
| incorrect | 68,72 | ||
| Old | correct | 84,20 | |
| incorrect | 62,36 |
Fig 4The confidence ratings calculated for hits (H), correct rejections (CR), false alarms (FA) and misses (M) in the sham, parietal and temporal groups, respectively.
Error bars represent standard error of the mean. Asterisks indicate significant differences.