“…Instead, the increased excitability elicited by anodal tDCS (during stimulation; Stagg & Nitsche, 2011) facilitated the acquisition of the phonological forms of the nonwords in long-term memory. This effect is likely to reflect the contributions of a number of neighbouring brain regions supporting aspects of phonological processing, including phonological short-term memory (Warrington & Shallice, 1969;Paulesu, Frith, & Frackowiak, 1993;Jonides et al, 1998;Henson, Burgess, & Frith, 2000;Buchsbaum & Esposito, 2008;Buchsbaum, Padmanabhan, & Berman, 2010;Acheson et al, 2011;Koenigs et al, 2011), phoneme sequencing (Gelfand & Bookheimer, 2003;Moser et al, 2009), translation of auditory to articulatory representations (Hickok & Poeppel, 2000;Papoutsi et al, 2009;Hickok, Houde, & Rong, 2011;Peschke, Ziegler, Eisenberger, & Baumgaertner, 2012), stimulus-driven attention (Downar, Crawley, Mikulis, & Davis, 2001;Ravizza, Hazeltine, Ruiz, & Zhu, 2011;Cabeza, Ciaramelli, & Moscovitch, 2012) and auditory processing for speech (posterior superior temporal cortex).…”