AbstractsPsychology

Cerebellar Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation for Motor Skill Acquisition in a Throwing Task

by Austuny Jackson




Institution: University of Nevada – Las Vegas
Department:
Year: 2016
Keywords: Kinesiology
Posted: 02/05/2017
Record ID: 2134754
Full text PDF: http://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/thesesdissertations/2684


Abstract

Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) is a non-invasive brain stimulation technique in which a very weak electrical current is applied to the scalp to either increase (anodal stimulation) or decrease (cathodal stimulation) the excitability of a selected brain region, most commonly the motor cortex. tDCS is a promising intervention that can modulate cortical excitability, enhance motor learning, and improve motor function in healthy subjects, older adults, stroke patients, Parkinson’s disease, and in other cognitive and motor disorders. Recently, cerebellar transcranial direct current stimulation (c-tDCS) has started to be examined using similar protocols as existing ones used in studies of tDCS applied to the motor cortex and has been able to improve performance in simple arm movement tasks in young and old adults. This study was is set out to evaluate the influence that c-tDCS has on accuracy and variability of a complex, multi-joint throwing task in younger adult population. A total of 24 (n = 12 per group) healthy young adult males were allocated to either a c-tDCS group or a SHAM stimulation group. Each subject participated in two experimental sessions (practice session, retention session) performed on consecutive days. In the first session (practice session), subjects performed the throwing task in a baseline testing block, followed by 6 practice trial blocks. The practice blocks were followed by a post-testing block. For the practice blocks only, subjects performed the throwing task for 25 minutes in combination with either c-tDCS or SHAM stimulation. In the second session (retention session), subjects perform a retention test (1 block of trials of the throwing task) 24 hours after the practice session to quantify the magnitude of motor learning experienced by the two groups. The primary dependent variable was the endpoint error, whereas the endpoint variance was selected as the secondary dependent variable. For the test blocks, the dependent variables were analyzed by two-factor repeated measures ANOVAs: 2 Group (c-tDCS, SHAM) x 3 Test (BASELINE, POST, RETENTION). For the practice blocks, the dependent variables were analyzed by two-factor repeated measures ANOVAs: 2 Group (c-tDCS, SHAM) x 6 Block (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6). For the endpoint error in the test blocks, there were no significant differences between the two groups of subjects for any of the testing blocks. However, independent of group, endpoint error was significantly lower for the post-test block compared with the baseline test block (P = 0.004). Furthermore, endpoint error was similar between the retention test block and the baseline test block. Finally, the difference in endpoint error between the retention test block and the post-test block barely failed statistical significance (P = 0.063). For the practice blocks, the results indicated that there were no significant differences in endpoint error between the c-tDCS and SHAM groups (P = 0.148). Furthermore, endpoint error was not different for any of the practice blocks,… Advisors/Committee Members: Brach Poston, Mark Guadagnoli, Richard Tandy, Daniel Young.