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29 January 2021 News

Scientists from St Petersburg University show that direct current stimulation of the brain over Wernicke's area can help people learn new abstract words

Researchers from the Laboratory of Behavioural Neurodynamics at St Petersburg University have studied how different types of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) of the brain affect the cquisition of new words. Their experiments have shown that cathodal tDCS over Wernicke’s area enables subjects to better remember new abstract words – those that refer to non-physical entities and ideas. The research outcomes have just been published by Scientific Reports. In future, they may lead to new assistive neurotechnologies for rehabilitation of people with cognitive disorders.

Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) is a non-invasive method of brain stimulation, in which electrodes are applied over certain places on the scalp, creating a weak electric field. It is currently used for a variety of purposes: from treating depression and pain syndromes to better acquisition of new words and even sports techniques.

During stimulation, the active electrode can transmit a positive or negative electrical charge. In the former case, this stimulation is called ‘anodal’; in the latter one, it is called ‘cathodal’. Researchers believe that anodal tDCS generally leads to depolarisation of neurons, which increases the likelihood of their excitation when new information arrives. Cathodal tDCS, on the contrary, suppresses the excitability of neurons, which negatively affects neural functions. However, the work of St Petersburg University scientists has shown that in the case of such complex cognitive functions as speech, this is not entirely true.

The researchers conducted the following experiment. Two groups of participants (24 people each) received cathodal or anodal stimulation over Wernicke's area, the part of the cerebral cortex associated with speech perception. Another group was a control one, in which the subjects received placebo (so-called sham) stimulation which imitates tDCS set-up without delivering actual current to the participant’s head. After that, the subjects studied novel concrete and abstract words, the meaning of which they needed to infer from the context of short stories. Learning effects were assessed at lexical and semantic levels immediately after the training. To attest the so-called memory consolidation effects, known to take place after an overnight sleep, they were also assessed on the next day.

To provide the same conditions for all participants, the scientists had selected very rarely used or outdated concepts (for example: an old bag made of oak, birch bark, wood chips) or concepts from other languages for which there was no equivalent in Russian (for example: the incomprehensible power of a work of art that deeply touches people). Additionally, the researchers had created novel pseudowords that resembled existing Russian words. They were created based on real words of the Russian language by changing their final syllables: the first two syllables of the word were preserved and the ultimate segment was changed (for example: 'барбарис’ and ‘первенец’ [‘barbaris’ and ‘pervenets’], i.e. ‘barberry’ and ‘firstborn’ were used to create novel pseudoword ‘barbanets’). One of the contextual sentences sounded like this: ‘Having sensed the characteristic smell, naturalist Gennady understood: there is a barbanets nearby’.

The learning success turned out to be different depending on the type of tDCS and the type of words (abstract / concrete). In the groups with anodal and sham stimulation, the results on abstract semantics acquisition were lower on the second day than on the first one, as may be expected given the

natural forgetting. However, such a decrease was not observed in the cathodal group. Additionally, both stimulation groups were generally more successful in learning than the placebo group. This effect was especially pronounced for abstract semantics after cathodal tDCS.

'Our research has shown that different but overlapping neural mechanisms are involved in the processing of abstract and concrete semantics. We see that the core language areas play a key role in the acquisition of abstract words. Moreover, cathodal direct current stimulation of these areas makes this process more effecient,’ says Diana Kurmakaeva, research associate at the Laboratory of Behavioural Neurodynamics at St Petersburg University and the first author of the article.

Diana Kurmakaeva noted that the results obtained may in the future be useful for developing rehabilitation techniques for people with speech impairments, for example, after brain injuries or strokes. In some cases, such patients retain the ability to operate concrete concepts, but are unable to use abstract ones. Since this information is processed and stored in different ways in the brain, it is important to know the specific areas and techniques for influencing their activity in order to help people recover from injuries.

The next stage of the research will be to study the influence of different types of tDCS on another core language structure in the human brain – the Broca’s area. It is another important speech center in the human brain and is primarily linked to speech production.

The Laboratory of Behavioural Neurodynamics at St Petersburg University was established within the framework of the so-called mega-grant programme  of the Russian Federal Government, – which funds a large interdisciplinary project ‘Cognitive Neurobiology of the Processes of Learning and Perception of Language’. The project is led by Professor Yury Shtyrov, a neurophysiologist and a graduate of St Petersburg University, who heads the laboratories of magneto- and electroencephalography at Aarhus University (Denmark). The Laboratory of Behavioural Neurodynamics focuses on the relationship between the processes that occur in our brain and various mental phenomena.

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