If
you have ever said or done the wrong thing at the wrong time, you
should read this. Neuroscientists at The University of Texas Health
Science Center at Houston and the University of California, San Diego,
have successfully demonstrated a technique to enhance a form of
self-control through a novel form of brain stimulation.
Study participants were asked to perform a
simple behavioral task that required the braking/slowing of action —
inhibition — in the brain. In each participant, the researchers first
identified the specific location for this brake in the prefrontal region
of the brain. Next, they increased activity in this brain region using
stimulation with brief and imperceptible electrical charges. This led to
increased braking — a form of enhanced self-control.
This proof-of-principle study appears in
the December 11 issue of The Journal of Neuroscience and its methods may
one day be useful for treating attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder, Tourette’s syndrome and other severe disorders of
self-control.
“There is a circuit in the brain for
inhibiting or braking responses,” said Nitin Tandon, M.D., the study’s
senior author and associate professor in The Vivian L. Smith Department
of Neurosurgery at the UTHealth Medical School. “We believe we are the
first to show that we can enhance this braking system with brain
stimulation.”
A computer stimulated the prefrontal
cortex exactly when braking was needed. This was done using electrodes
implanted directly on the brain surface.
When the test was repeated with
stimulation of a brain region outside the prefrontal cortex, there was
no effect on behavior, showing the effect to be specific to the
prefrontal braking system.
This was a double-blind study, meaning
that participants and scientists did not know when or where the charges
were being administered.
The method of electrical stimulation was
novel in that it apparently enhanced prefrontal function, whereas other
human brain stimulation studies mostly disrupt normal brain activity.
This is the first published human study to enhance prefrontal lobe
function using direct electrical stimulation, the researchers report.
The study involved four volunteers with
epilepsy who agreed to participate while being monitored for seizures at
the Mischer Neuroscience Institute at Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical
Centre. Stimulation enhanced braking in all four participants.
Tandon has been working on self-control
research with researchers at the University of California, San Diego,
for five years. “Our daily life is full of occasions when one must
inhibit responses. For example, one must stop speaking when it’s
inappropriate to the social context and stop oneself from reaching for
extra candy,” said Tandon, who is a neurosurgeon with the Mischer
Neuroscience Institute at Memorial Hermann-TMC.
The researchers are quick to point out
that while their results are promising, they do not yet point to the
ability to improve self-control in general. In particular, this study
does not show that direct electrical stimulation is a realistic option
for treating human self-control disorders such as obsessive-compulsive
disorder, Tourette’s syndrome and borderline personality disorder.
Notably, direct electrical stimulation requires an invasive surgical
procedure, which is now used only for the localisation and treatment of
severe epilepsy.
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