“…Over the past decades, a plethora of studies have investigated behavioral changes after transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS, for reviews see e.g., Pascual-Leone et al, 2000;Rushworth and Taylor, 2006;Koch and Rothwell, 2009;Rossini et al, 2010;Crivelli and Balconi, 2017;Klaus and Schutter, 2018). Although brain stimulation is a promising approach to study the causal relationship and close the explanatory gap between brain function and behavior, it has its drawbacks as exemplified in interpreting behavioral null results after stimulation (e.g., Rossi et al, 2006;Zanto et al, 2013;Gohil et al, 2016;Bor et al, 2017;Engelen et al, 2018;Layher et al, 2018;Lopez-Alonso et al, 2018;Codol et al, 2020;see also De Graaf and Sack, 2011). There are a number of possible explanations for TMS null results ranging from the stimulated brain region not being causally involved in the tested behavior (Rossi et al, 2006;Gohil et al, 2016) to dynamic brain network changes compensating for the stimulation (Lee et al, 2003;O'Shea et al, 2007;Zanto et al, 2013;Hartwigsen, 2018).…”