Evidence against benefits from cognitive training and transcranial direct current stimulation in healthy older adults

被引:0
|
作者
Kristina S. Horne
Hannah L. Filmer
Zoie E. Nott
Ziarih Hawi
Kealan Pugsley
Jason B. Mattingley
Paul E. Dux
机构
[1] University of Queensland,School of Psychology
[2] Monash University,School of Psychological Sciences
[3] University of Queensland,Queensland Brain Institute
来源
Nature Human Behaviour | 2021年 / 5卷
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摘要
Cognitive training and brain stimulation show promise for ameliorating age-related neurocognitive decline. However, evidence for this is controversial. In a Registered Report, we investigated the effects of these interventions, where 133 older adults were allocated to four groups (left prefrontal cortex anodal transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) with decision-making training, and three control groups) and trained over 5 days. They completed a task/questionnaire battery pre- and post-training, and at 1- and 3-month follow-ups. COMT and BDNF Val/Met polymorphisms were also assessed. Contrary to work in younger adults, there was evidence against tDCS-induced training enhancement on the decision-making task. Moreover, there was evidence against transfer of training gains to untrained tasks or everyday function measures at any post-intervention time points. As indicated by exploratory work, individual differences may have influenced outcomes. But, overall, the current decision-making training and tDCS protocol appears unlikely to lead to benefits for older adults.
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页码:146 / 158
页数:12
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