“…Predominantly, these studies are characterized by short stimulation periods, addressing the immediate effects. Psychological targets have been broad (though not all of them are sensitive to tVNS), including: experimentally induced worry (Burger et al, 2019a ); post-error slowing (Sellaro et al, 2015b ); attention to fearful faces (Verkuil and Burger, 2019 ); associative memory (Jacobs et al, 2015 ) or single-item word memory (Giraudier et al, 2020 ; Mertens et al, 2020 ); extinction of fear responses or fear conditioning (Burger et al, 2016 , 2017 , 2018 , 2019b ; Genheimer et al, 2017 ; Szeska et al, 2020 ); implicit spiritual self-representations (Finisguerra et al, 2019 ); flow experience (Colzato et al, 2018b ); response selection during sequential action (Jongkees et al, 2018 ) or during action cascading processes (Steenbergen et al, 2015 ); the recognition of emotions in faces or bodies (Colzato et al, 2017 ; Sellaro et al, 2018 ; Koenig et al, 2019 ); divergent thinking (Colzato et al, 2018a ); conflict-triggered adjustment of cognitive control (Fischer et al, 2018 ); auditory selective attention (Rufener et al, 2018 ) or visual selective attention (Ventura-Bort et al, 2018 ); inhibitory control (Beste et al, 2016 ; Borges et al, 2020 ); automatic motor inhibition (Keute et al, 2018 ); cognitive flexibility (Borges et al, 2020 ; Tona et al, 2020 ); prosocial behavior (Sellaro et al, 2015a ) and reward sensitivity (Neuser et al, 2019 ).…”