Because of the depth of the hippocampal-entorhinal complex (HC-EC) in the brain, understanding of its role in spatial navigation via neuromodulation was limited in humans. Here, we aimed to better elucidate this relationship in healthy volunteers, using transcranial temporal interference electric stimulation (tTIS), a noninvasive technique allowing to selectively neuromodulate deep brain structures. We applied tTIS to the right HC-EC in either continuous or intermittent theta-burst stimulation patterns (cTBS or iTBS), compared to a control condition, during a virtual reality–based spatial navigation task and concomitant functional magnetic resonance imaging. iTBS improved spatial navigation performance, correlated with hippocampal activity modulation, and decreased grid cell–like activity in EC. Collectively, these data provide the evidence that human HC-EC activity can be directly and noninvasively modulated leading to changes of spatial navigation behavior. These findings suggest promising perspectives for patients suffering from cognitive impairment such as following traumatic brain injury or dementia. , Transcranial temporal interference stimulation allows noninvasive modulation of the hippocampus leading to better navigation.
Publication scientifique
Noninvasive modulation of the hippocampal-entorhinal complex during spatial navigation in humans
Autres publications de la plateforme
Causal disconnectomics of motion perception networks: insights from transcranial magnetic stimulation‐induced...
Boosting hemianopia recovery: the power of interareal cross-frequency brain stimulation
Return of the GEDAI: Unsupervised EEG Denoising based on Leadfield Filtering
Multivariate deep phenotyping reveals behavioral correlates of non-restorative sleep in 22q11.2...
EEG microstate D as psychosis-specific correlate in adolescents and young adults...
EEG correlates of egocentric and altercentric biases in forensic cases with...
Journal de publication
Auteurs:
Date de publication:
Plateforme:
Études récentes de la plateforme

Restaurer le mouvement après une paralysie

Comment les souvenirs évoluent-ils avec le temps ?










