Cathodal tDCS of the Bilateral Anterior Temporal Lobes Facilitates Semantically-Driven Verbal Fluency

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Cathodal tDCS of the Bilateral Anterior Temporal Lobes Facilitates Semantically-Driven Verbal Fluency. / Binney, Richard; Zuckerman, Bonnie; Waller, Hilary et al.
In: Neuropsychologia, Vol. 111, 03.2018, p. 62-71.

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Binney R, Zuckerman B, Waller H, Hung J, Ashaie S, Reilly J. Cathodal tDCS of the Bilateral Anterior Temporal Lobes Facilitates Semantically-Driven Verbal Fluency. Neuropsychologia. 2018 Mar;111:62-71. Epub 2018 Jan 11. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2018.01.009

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Binney, Richard ; Zuckerman, Bonnie ; Waller, Hilary et al. / Cathodal tDCS of the Bilateral Anterior Temporal Lobes Facilitates Semantically-Driven Verbal Fluency. In: Neuropsychologia. 2018 ; Vol. 111. pp. 62-71.

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Cathodal tDCS of the Bilateral Anterior Temporal Lobes Facilitates Semantically-Driven Verbal Fluency

AU - Binney, Richard

AU - Zuckerman, Bonnie

AU - Waller, Hilary

AU - Hung, Jinyi

AU - Ashaie, Sameer

AU - Reilly, Jamie

PY - 2018/3

Y1 - 2018/3

N2 - In a verbal fluency task, a person is required to produce as many exemplars of a given category (e.g., ‘animals’, or words starting with ‘f’) as possible within a fixed duration. Successful verbal fluency performance relies both on the depth of search within semantic/phonological neighborhoods (‘clustering’) and the ability to flexibly disengage between exhausted clusters (‘switching’). Convergent evidence from functional imaging and neuropsychology suggests that cluster-switch behaviors engage dissociable brain regions. Switching has been linked to a frontoparietal network dedicated to executive functioning and controlled lexical retrieval, whereas clustering is more commonly associated with temporal lobe regions dedicated to semantic and phonological processing. Here we attempted to modulate cluster-switch dynamics among neurotypical adults (N=24) using transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) delivered at three sites: a) anterior temporal cortex; b) frontal cortex; and c) temporoparietal cortex. Participants completed letter-guided and semantic category verbal fluency tasks pre/post stimulation. Cathodal stimulation of anterior temporal cortex facilitated the total number of words generated and the number of words generated within clusters during semantic category verbal fluency. These neuromodulatory effects were specific to stimulation of the one anatomical site. Our findings highlight the role of the anterior temporal lobes in representing semantic category structure and support the claim that clustering and switching behaviors have distinct substrates. We discuss implications both for theory and application to neurorehabilitation.

AB - In a verbal fluency task, a person is required to produce as many exemplars of a given category (e.g., ‘animals’, or words starting with ‘f’) as possible within a fixed duration. Successful verbal fluency performance relies both on the depth of search within semantic/phonological neighborhoods (‘clustering’) and the ability to flexibly disengage between exhausted clusters (‘switching’). Convergent evidence from functional imaging and neuropsychology suggests that cluster-switch behaviors engage dissociable brain regions. Switching has been linked to a frontoparietal network dedicated to executive functioning and controlled lexical retrieval, whereas clustering is more commonly associated with temporal lobe regions dedicated to semantic and phonological processing. Here we attempted to modulate cluster-switch dynamics among neurotypical adults (N=24) using transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) delivered at three sites: a) anterior temporal cortex; b) frontal cortex; and c) temporoparietal cortex. Participants completed letter-guided and semantic category verbal fluency tasks pre/post stimulation. Cathodal stimulation of anterior temporal cortex facilitated the total number of words generated and the number of words generated within clusters during semantic category verbal fluency. These neuromodulatory effects were specific to stimulation of the one anatomical site. Our findings highlight the role of the anterior temporal lobes in representing semantic category structure and support the claim that clustering and switching behaviors have distinct substrates. We discuss implications both for theory and application to neurorehabilitation.

KW - Verbal Fluency

KW - tDCS

KW - Anterior temporal lobe

KW - Semantic cognition

KW - Lexical Retrieval

U2 - 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2018.01.009

DO - 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2018.01.009

M3 - Article

VL - 111

SP - 62

EP - 71

JO - Neuropsychologia

JF - Neuropsychologia

SN - 0028-3932

ER -