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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 December 2023
The aim of the present study was to analyse the effects of the transcranial random noise stimulation (tRNS) technique when placed on the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (L-DPFC) and left inferior frontal gyrus (L-IFG), for the improvement of verbal fluency performance and creativity skills in a group of multilingual healthy adults.
Fifty healthy adults, aged 18-47 years, participated in the study. All of them were native Spanish speakers of which three were bilingual (Spanish and English) and 47 were multilingual (Spanish, Basque and English). The study had a randomized, counterbalanced, double-blind, sham-controlled design. The participants were randomly allocated to either a tRNS active group or a placebo-control group. All participants were tested individually in one session divided into three parts: (1) baseline, (2) online, and (3) offline assessment. In the active condition, a 1.5mA current (100-500 Hz) was delivered for 20 minutes (online phase). Participants’ verbal fluency was assessed through semantic and phonemic verbal fluency tasks in three different languages (Spanish, Basque and English), while creativity was assessed in their native language with the Remote Associations Test (RAT, pre and post forms) for convergent thinking, and with the Unusual Uses subtest (UU, pre and post forms) for divergent thinking. In addition, the linguistic profile of the participants was evaluated with the Language Experience and Proficiency Questionnaire (LEAP-Q), and their processing speed and cognitive flexibility were assessed with the Stroop Color and Word Test (SCWT).
The results showed significant differences in phonemic fluency between the groups during the online assessment in Spanish (F= 5.31, p = 0.026), and in the offline assessments in Spanish (F=6.44, p = 0.015) and English (F=10.80, p = 0.002), with participants in the active condition performing better. While no differences were observed in the performance of the groups in verbal fluency in Basque, neither in the online (F=1.06, p = 0.31), nor in the offline assessment (F=2.62, p = 0.11). Furthermore, no significant differences were observed between groups in semantic verbal fluency tasks in any of the languages, neither during stimulation nor offline. However, there were no differences between conditions in the online (Spanish, F=0.86, p = 0.35; English, F=2.95, p = 0.09; and Basque, F=0.01 p = 0.94) and offline (Spanish, F=2.53, p = 0.11; English, F=0.74, p = 0.39; and Basque, F=1.39, p = 0.24) semantic tasks. In creativity, significant differences were observed between groups on the RAT (F=9.58, p = 0.003), while no differences were observed in the performance of any of the three dimensions of the UU (Originality, F=0.44, p = 0.51; Flexibility, F=0.42, p = 0.51; Fluency, F=0.69, p = 0.41). In the SCWT, statistically significant differences were only observed in the colour-word part (F=7.60, p = 0.008) during the online assessment, showing a better performance of the participants under the tRNS condition compare to the sham condition.
The results obtained in this study suggest that the excitatory effects of tRNS over the L-DLPFC L-IFG could contribute to the improvement of phonemic verbal fluency and verbal convergent thinking, in healthy individuals.