Transcranial random noise stimulation acutely lowers the response threshold of human motor circuits

Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Title

The Journal of Neuroscience

Volume

41

Issue

17

First Page

3842

Last Page

3853

PubMed ID

33737456

Publisher

Society for Neuroscience

School

School of Medical and Health Sciences

RAS ID

39678

Comments

Potok, W., Bächinger, M., van der Groen, O., Cretu, A. L., & Wenderoth, N. (2021). Transcranial random noise stimulation acutely lowers the response threshold of human motor circuits. Journal of Neuroscience, 41(17), 3842-3853. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2961-20.2021

Abstract

Transcranial random noise stimulation (tRNS) over cortical areas has been shown to acutely improve performance in sensory detection tasks. One explanation for this behavioral effect is stochastic resonance (SR), a mechanism that explains how signal processing in nonlinear systems can benefit from added noise. While acute noise benefits of electrical RNS have been demonstrated at the behavioral level as well as in in vitro preparations of neural tissue, it is currently largely unknown whether similar effects can be shown at the neural population level using neurophysiological readouts of human cortex. Here, we hypothesized that acute tRNS will increase the responsiveness of primary motor cortex (M1) when probed with transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). Neural responsiveness was operationalized via the well-known concept of the resting motor threshold (RMT). We showed that tRNS acutely decreases RMT. This effect was small, but it was consistently replicated across four experiments including different cohorts (total N = 81, 46 females, 35 males), two tRNS electrode montages, and different control conditions. Our experiments provide critical neurophysiological evidence that tRNS can acutely generate noise benefits by enhancing the neural population response of human M1.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT A hallmark feature of stochastic resonance (SR) is that signal processing can benefit from added noise. This has mainly been demonstrated at the single-cell level in vitro where the neural response to weak input signals can be enhanced by simultaneously applying random noise. Our finding that transcranial random noise stimulation (tRNS) acutely increases the excitability of corticomotor circuits extends the principle of noise benefits to the neural population level in human cortex. Our finding is in line with the notion that tRNS might affect cortical processing via the SR phenomenon. It suggests that enhancing the response of cortical populations to an external stimulus might be one neurophysiological mechanism mediating performance improvements when tRNS is applied to sensory cortex during perception tasks.

DOI

10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2961-20.2021

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