DARPA takes new look at electrical brain stimulation to aid
in learning April 21, 2011
by Bob Yirka in Neuroscience
http://medicalxpress.com/news/2011-04-darpa-electrical-brain-aid.html
New research going on in Albequerque, NM by a team of
neuroscientists working for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
(DARPA) indicates that mild brain stimulation with electrical shocks, might in
fact cause people to learn more easily.
The team, led by Vincent Clark, of the University of New
Mexico, has been applying electrodes to the scalps of volunteers, and then
giving them very mild electrical shocks while they play a battle simulation
video game designed to teach soldiers to react properly in stressful
conditions. Called transcranial direct-current stimulation (tDCS), the
procedure employs a nine volt battery and electrodes connected to wet sponges
affixed to the temples of game players to send just a few milliamps of current
through the skull and into the brain as they attempt to differentiate between
friend and foe in dilapidated, potentially dangerous environmental conditions.
Two groups were tested, one received 2 milliamps while they
played, the other just 0.1. The volunteers receiving the larger amount showed
twice as much improvement as those that did not, which Clark says shows quite
clearly how effective tDCS can be. Pilot video for tDCS informed consent.
Applying electricity to the brain has a long and at times dark history.
Doctors, psychiatrists and other researchers have known for
hundreds of years that applying electrical current to the brain can cause
changes; some good, some not so much. Electrical stimulation has been used to
keep executed prisoners from twitching after death, to “help” patients overcome
depression and more recently to help people with injuries or brain impairments to
regain functionality. This history now colors any new research as fear and
skepticism tend to get in the way of serious work.
This is likely the
reason that this new research is being done by DARPA, rather than an
independent organization; it doesn’t have to answer to anyone except the DoD.
Because the amount of current is so small, volunteers report no pain, just a
slight tingling sensation during the procedure, and afterwards can offer no
real explanations as to why they performed better than they might have
otherwise.
This research, and other studies like it, have set off both
alarms and intrigue in certain quarters. Some worry people, such as college
students will jump on the procedure as a means to help cram for exams, others
wonder if electronic devices such as blue-tooth phones are emitting electricity
that might help them learn; while others yet point out, very soberly, that no
one really knows just yet what long-term effects people might have from
exposure to something as simple as tCDS.
Read more at: http://medicalxpress.com/news/2011-04-darpa-electrical-brain-aid.html#jCp
Read more at: http://medicalxpress.com/news/2011-04-darpa-electrical-brain-aid.html#jCp
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