2019
DOI: 10.1007/s41465-019-00154-3
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Investigating the Effects of tDCS on Visual Orientation Discrimination Task Performance: “the Possible Influence of Placebo”

Abstract: The non-invasive neuromodulation technique tDCS offers the promise of a low-cost tool for both research and clinical applications in psychology, psychiatry, and neuroscience. However, findings regarding its efficacy are often equivocal. A key issue is that the clinical and cognitive applications studied are often complex and thus effects of tDCS are difficult to predict given its known effects on the basic underlying neurophysiology, namely alterations in cortical inhibition-excitation balance. As such, it may… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(23 citation statements)
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References 126 publications
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“…Moreover, the inclusion of a sham or control condition for comparison with the stimulation condition is not standard in research, despite the fact that the placebo effect of noninvasive brain stimulation techniques is well-known in both participants and experimenters, highlighting the importance of applying double-blind procedures. 183,184 Future studies should also move in the direction of coupling noninvasive brain stimulation with behavioural or cognitive interventions, investigating whether combined treatment is more effective than monotherapy. Another crucial point about the efficacy of noninvasive brain stimu lation protocols is based on sex.…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, the inclusion of a sham or control condition for comparison with the stimulation condition is not standard in research, despite the fact that the placebo effect of noninvasive brain stimulation techniques is well-known in both participants and experimenters, highlighting the importance of applying double-blind procedures. 183,184 Future studies should also move in the direction of coupling noninvasive brain stimulation with behavioural or cognitive interventions, investigating whether combined treatment is more effective than monotherapy. Another crucial point about the efficacy of noninvasive brain stimu lation protocols is based on sex.…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Proponents of brain stimulation techniques argue that more refined stimulation protocols may be necessary, taking into account individual variability in brain structure and function for instance (Antal et al 2015;Opitz et al 2015). Expectancy effects could partly underlie the perceived efficacy of tDCS effects (Dawood et al 2019;Turi et al 2019) and the present study demonstrates that expectations about cognitive enhancement versus impairment clearly exert subjective but not objective effects. In our study design, we kept the accuracy at a constant level by adjusting the time window for responding-but even then the response times turned out to be comparable between the different conditions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 54%
“…Concerning the studies including a clinical sample, only few protocols investigated NIBS efficacy at a group-level. Moreover, the inclusion of a sham or control condition to be compared to the real stimulation is not the standard in researchers’ procedure, despite the placebo effect of NIBS techniques is well-known, in both participants and experimenters, thus highlighting the importance of applying double blind procedures 181, 182 . Future studies should also move in the direction of coupling NIBS with behavioral / cognitive interventions, investigating whether coupled treatment can be more effective than monotherapies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%