Comparing Electrical and Ultrasound Transcutaneous Vagus Nerve Stimulation (taVNS) on Associative Memory
Griffiths, B. J.; He, Z.; Ciftepinar, I.; Choi, H.; Song, J.-J.; Kaiser, M.; Jung, J.
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Associative memory, the ability to bind and retrieve relationships between unrelated elements, is a cornerstone of human cognition and a primary target for neurorehabilitation. Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) has emerged as a promising method to modulate the locus coeruleus-norepinephrine (LC-NE) system and hippocampal-prefrontal circuits essential for memory. However, the comparative efficacy of non-invasive modalities such as electrical (E-taVNS) and the emerging field of ultrasound (U-taVNS) remains poorly understood in the context of active recall. In this study, participants performed a crossmodal video-word associative memory task before and after receiving either E-taVNS or U-taVNS in active and sham conditions. We investigated whether these modalities enhance cued recall accuracy and retrieval reaction time. Our results revealed that neither E-taVNS nor U-taVNS significantly improved recall accuracy. However, E-taVNS significantly accelerated response times specifically for correctly recalled items. These findings suggest that while taVNS may not increase the likelihood of recalling associative memories, electrical stimulation may enhances the efficiency in which we do so. These findings suggest that electrical taVNS is a viable tool for facilitating memory search processes, though further research is required to optimize ultrasound parameters and validate mechanistic pathways through physiological monitoring.
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