Detection of tACS Entrainment Critically Depends on Epoch Length.

Front Cell Neurosci

Exp ORL, Department of Neurosciences, The Leuven Brain Institute, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.

Published: March 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Neural entrainment refers to how groups of neurons synchronize with external rhythmic stimuli, like tACS, which can impact human behavior.
  • Many studies show mixed results on tACS's effectiveness, leading researchers to explore why this happens using rat motor cortex data.
  • They found that the ability to detect neural entrainment greatly improves with longer time periods for collecting data, suggesting that behavioral studies using longer 'epoch lengths' will better capture tACS effects, whereas shorter periods may miss them.

Article Abstract

Neural entrainment is the phase synchronization of a population of neurons to an external rhythmic stimulus such as applied in the context of transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS). tACS can cause profound effects on human behavior. However, there remain a significant number of studies that find no behavioral effect when tACS is applied to human subjects. To investigate this discrepancy, we applied time sensitive phase lock value (PLV) based analysis to single unit data from the rat motor cortex. The analysis revealed that detection of neural entrainment depends critically on the epoch length within which spiking information is accumulated. Increasing the epoch length allowed for detection of progressively weaker levels of neural entrainment. Based on this single unit analysis, we hypothesized that tACS effects on human behavior would be more easily detected in a behavior paradigm which utilizes longer epoch lengths. We tested this by using tACS to entrain tremor in patients and healthy volunteers. When the behavioral data were analyzed using short duration epochs tremor entrainment effects were not detectable. However, as the epoch length was progressively increased, weak tremor entrainment became detectable. These results suggest that tACS behavioral paradigms that rely on the accumulation of information over long epoch lengths will tend to be successful at detecting behavior effects. However, tACS paradigms that rely on short epoch lengths are less likely to detect effects.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8963722PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fncel.2022.806556DOI Listing

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