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University of Zurich, Institute of Psychology, Division Neuropsychology, Switzerland Behavioral and Brain Functions 2008, 4:34doi:10.1186/1744-9081-4-34 The electronic version of this article is the complete one and can be found online at: http://www.behavioralandbrainfunctions.com/content/4/1/34 © 2008 Beeli et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. Driving a car is a complex task requiring coordinated functioning of distributed brain regions. Controlled and safe driving
depends on the integrity of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), a brain region, which has been shown to mature in
late adolescence. In this study, driving performance of twenty-four male participants was tested in a high-end driving simulator before and
after the application of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) for 15 minutes over the left or right DLPFC. We show that external modulation of both, the left and the right, DLPFC directly influences driving behavior. Excitation
of the DLPFC (by applying anodal tDCS) leads to a more careful driving style in virtual scenarios without the participants
noticing changes in their behavior. This study is one of the first to prove that external stimulation of a specific brain area can influence a multi-part behavior
in a very complex and everyday-life situation, therefore breaking new ground for therapy at a neural level. Standardized so-called "gambling tasks" in which participants can win or loose money by drawing cards from different decks
have become an established tool for the investigation of "risk behavior" in psychological and neurophysiological research
[Iowa Gambling Task:. [1], Cambridge Gambling Task: [2,3]]. Typically, riskier behavior in these tasks leads to higher gains but also to higher losses. The standardization of such
gambling tasks is crucial when considering their clinical application; e.g. in the diagnosis of patients having problems with
impulsiveness or planning and decision-making. At a neural level, risk-taking behavior, decision-making and impulsiveness share similar neural networks in the dorsolateral
prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) [1]. Patients with lesions in the DLPFC (especially in the right hemisphere) show riskier behavior than a healthy control group
[4]. By contrast, lesions in the ventro-medial prefrontal cortex lead to "myopia" for the future, that is, insensitivity for
future consequences of present behavior [1]. Interestingly, recent studies have shown that external stimulation of the DLPFC with Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation
(TMS) [5] and with Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) [6] can influence risk-taking behavior. The DLPFC is a brain region that matures through to late adolescence [7], and even during the second decade of life [8]. The late myelination of the DLPFC may serve as one possible explanation why adolescent behavior is often characterized
by motivational difficulties, addiction and impulsivity [9]. The fact that driving accidents are the main cause of death for adolescents and young adults is a problem of paramount
importance, also from a political perspective [10]. Different studies reported that risky driving behavior is more prominent among young drivers [11]. The frequency of substance abuse and the degree of aggressiveness are (besides gender and social factors) the main predictors
for risky driving [12]. Furthermore, children diagnosed with ADHD have been shown to have an elevated risk for driving-related problems in adulthood
[13]. In view of the preceding, we can assume that the DLPFC is importantly involved in modulating risky driving behavior. Results
from the standardized "Risk-" and "Gambling-Tasks" are consistent with the findings about the neurodevelopment of the DLPFC,
but the generalization of findings to everyday life situations is hampered by the high specificity of these paradigms. The aim of this study was to examine the role of the DLPFC in a situation more closely associated with risk taking in everyday
life. We hypothesized that excitation of the DLPFC causes stronger executive control and less risky driving behavior. In order
to test this hypothesis, we modulated neural excitability of the participants' DLPFC before measuring their performance in
a driving simulator. As mentioned above, several studies have reported differential involvement of the right and left DLPFC
in the control of risk behavior [14]. Therefore, we also tested for such laterality effects expecting stronger effects after modulation of the right PFC. In contrast to an earlier study on the modulation of risk behavior by external brain stimulation [5], we used tDCS instead of TMS. tDCS has the advantage that the participants barely notice the stimulation. Furthermore, depending
on the direction of the current flow, neural excitability can be either enhanced or decreased. Twenty-four male subjects participated in the study. Twenty-one of them were students. All participants were between 20
and 30 years old (mean age: 24.1; SD: 2.7). Male subjects were chosen because in pilot experiments men were found to have
a lower probability of experiencing nausea in the driving simulator. All of the participants were right-handed, had no history
of neurological or psychiatric diseases and were in the possession of a driver's license for at least 2 years. The experiment
was approved by the local ethic committee (ethic committee of the canton of Zurich, specialized subcommittee for psychiatry,
neurology and neurosurgery, Oetwil am See, Switzerland). Every subject was tested on two different days within a week. On the first day, after a theoretical instruction about the
driving simulator and the tDCS procedure, all subjects gave their written informed consent for participation in the experiment
and filled in a questionnaire about their driving behavior (frequency of driving and years in possession of driver's license),
education and health. Before the actual experiment, participants had the opportunity to drive a sample course ("circuit")
in the driving simulator in order to get used to the simulation. For the actual experiment, a course called "Mountain Course" [15] was chosen (see below for details). Every participant drove this course once without any tDCS influence. After this "baseline-drive",
tDCS was applied over the DLPFC for 15 min (see below for details). In half of the subjects stimulation was applied to the
right hemisphere, while in the other half the left hemisphere was stimulated. After the stimulation, the tDCS equipment was
removed and the subjects drove the same course under the after-effect of the stimulation without cables on their heads. This
protocol (testing performance after the application of tDCS) was used to increase external validity of the driving situation
and relies on the long-lasting after-effects of tDCS (on the motor cortex until 90 min) [16]. To our knowledge, there are no studies that investigated after-effects of tDCS on prefrontal cortical areas. Therefore,
we assume similar temporal characteristics as reported for the motor cortex. During the stimulation with tDCS, the participants
sat outside the driving simulator on a chair and filled in the handedness and health questionnaires [17]. To assess subjective involvement in the virtual environment, an adapted version of the MEC-SQ (spatial presence questionnaire)
[18] was filled in by the participants after each driving session. The possible impact of the tDCS stimulation on the emotional
state was assessed using the Self-Assessment-Manikin [19] before and after stimulation. On the second day, the same procedure was applied but the stimulation electrodes were switched
resulting in a stimulation condition (anodal or cathodal stimulation) different from that applied during the first experimental
day. The order of the stimulation conditions was counterbalanced. The questionnaires about health and handedness were not
filled in on this second day. This difference in procedure on the second day, however, is unproblematic since the conditions
were counterbalanced across subjects. The driving simulator used in the experiment is an upgraded version of the F10PF-Model of the Dr.-Ing. Reiner Foerst GmbH
[15]. The virtual environment was projected on three 61" videowalls (RP 61" ES LCD) [20]. The actual test-course, called "Mountain Course", consists of a car that can be driven on a road starting outside a small
village, passing through the village with traffic lights, and then following a route through built up areas. The simulation
automatically stopped after a covered distance of 3 km (lasting around 3.5 min depending on driving speed). The scene was
identical for each subject. Traffic, traffic lights, dangerous events (children, animals) etc. were simulated randomly in
order to enhance the reality of the scene. Every 20 ms, about 30 measures with which to capture driving behavior were registered
(e.g. driving speed, distance to driver ahead, position in the course, position of break, accelerator, gear, revolutions per
minute, lateral distance from road mid-line etc.) The "DC-Stimulator" distributed by neuroConn© [21] was used for transcranial direct current stimulation. The constant current was applied through two saline-soaked electrodes
with a surface of 35 cm2. Based on earlier studies modulating DLPFC excitability [5], stimulation electrodes were placed at the F3 or F4 position (international EEG 10–20-system), respectively for left
and right-hemispheric stimulation. For DLPFC excitation, the anode was positioned on F3 (or F4) and the cathode was mounted
on the ipsilateral mastoid. For DLPFC inhibition, the two electrodes were switched (cathode over F3/F4, anode over ipsilateral
mastoid). The subjects were randomly divided into two equally sized groups. One group was stimulated on the left, the other
on the right hemisphere. tDCS was applied for 15 minutes with a constant current intensity of 1mA. As a precaution measure,
the "DC-Stimulator" automatically turns off when electrical resistance is too high. Dependent variables reflecting driving performance under the influence of tDCS were compared with the performance during
the baseline-drive (before tDCS application) using repeated-measures ANOVAs with 'time' (2 levels; pre- vs. post-simulation)
and 'stimulation condition' (2 levels; anodal vs. cathodal) as within-subject factors and 'side of stimulation' as between-subject
factor. For each dependent variable ("distance to driver ahead", "driving speed", "speed violations" and "revolutions per
minute") an individual ANOVA model was set up. Post-hoc t-tests (based on the Bonferroni-Holm procedure) were calculated to
further explore the effects of the ANOVA. Prior to the statistical analyses, behavioral data of three participants were excluded (right-hemispheric stimulation group:
1, left-hemispheric stimulation group: 2) because these subjects demonstrated extremely high or low values for the parameter
"distance to driver ahead" before tDCS stimulation. The remaining data were subjected to repeated-measure ANOVAs with 'time'
and 'stimulation condition' as within-subject factors and 'side of stimulation' as between-subject factor. As displayed in
figure 1, the analyses revealed 'time × condition' interactions for "distance to driver ahead" [F(1,19) = 4.25, p = 0.05] and
"number of speed violations in built-up areas" [F(1,19) = 5.97, p = 0.02]. The same trend was evident for "driving
speed" [F(1,32) = 2.83, p = 0.1] and "revolutions per minute" [F(1,32) = 3.21, p = 0.09]. There was no main
effect of 'side of stimulation' or an interaction of this between-subject factor with the variables of interest (time, condition)
for any of the four variables. Post-hoc paired t-tests revealed that anodal tDCS induced an increase of the "distance to driver ahead" [right-hemisphere
tDCS: T(10) = -1.77, p = .05; left-hemisphere tDCS: T(9) = -1.84, p = .05] and declines in "number of speed violations"
[right-hemisphere tDCS: T(10) = 3.26, p = .005; left-hemisphere tDCS: T(9) = 1.54, p = .08], "driving speed" [right-hemisphere
tDCS: T(10) = 1.64, p = .07; left-hemisphere tDCS: T(9) = 1.56, p = .08], and "revolutions per minute" [right-hemisphere
tDCS: T(10) = -1.51, p = .08; left-hemisphere tDCS: T(9) = 3.10, p = .006]. All four variables indicate a more cautious
driving behavior when DLPFC activity is enhanced. For cathodal tDCS, on the other hand, only one trend was registered (decrease
of "driving speed" in the left-hemisphere stimulation group; p = .08). Hence, learning effects induced merely by the repeated
exposure to the task cannot explain the effects found. To compare the two groups, post-stimulation performance was related to the individual pre-stimulation performance for each
participant (a posttraining value of 100% means no change from pre- to posttraining). The corresponding values are depicted
in figure 2. Since, in case of cathodal stimulation, the resulting values did not differ significantly from the reference value (100%),
we refrain from comparing between-group differences. With respect to anodal tDCS, two-sample t-tests comparing the performance
changes between the two groups resulted in p-values > 0.4 for all behavioral variables. Subjects did not indicate different degrees of presence in the virtual scene in the different conditions, and there were
no differences in emotion either, as reported with the Self-Assessment Manikin. None of the subjects reported nausea during
driving simulation. The years in possession of a driver's license were not associated with different effects of tDCS. The present study aimed to examine effects of tDCS, and hence, of the induced manipulation of DLPFC activity on driving
behavior in a customary driving simulator. As a main result, we found that anodal tDCS evoked less risky driving behavior
while cathodal tDCS did not significantly influence the driving style. With respect to anodal stimulation, behavioral differences
were found in four variables ("driving speed", "distance to driver ahead", "number of speed violations", "revolutions per
minute") measuring different aspects of driving behavior. While the "distance to driver ahead" was larger after anodal tDCS
as compared to the baseline measurement, the "number of speed violations", the "driving speed" and the "revolutions per minute"
were reduced. These strong behavioral changes are evident despite the fact that the participants were not aware of their change
in behavior. The crucial association between functions mediated by the prefrontal cortex and risk-taking driving behavior found in this
study is in line with previous findings about the prefrontal cortex [1]. It is remarkable that a complex behavior such as driving a car can be directly influenced by an external modulation of
the cortical excitability. Our main result is consistent with earlier research focusing on the external modulation of DLPFC
activity and its effects on risk-taking behavior in situations less closely related to risk-taking in everyday life [5,22,23]. Knoch et al., for example, showed that low-frequency rTMS applied over the DLPFC evoked more risky behavioral choices in
a standard gambling paradigm [5]. The authors did not, however, study the effect of DLPFC excitation (as evoked by high-frequency rTMS) in their study, which
would have induced similar effects in the stimulated tissue as anodal tDCS. Furthermore, Fecteau et al. reported a reduction
of risk-taking behavior in different task paradigms following tDCS applied over the DLPFC [6,24]. In their studies, the two electrodes were mounted to overly the left and right DLPFC areas – an electrode configuration
that allowed the simultaneous stimulation of both hemispheres. Depending on the task, behavioral effects were evident only
after right anodal/left cathodal stimulation [24] or after both, right anodal/left cathodal and left anodal/right cathodal DLPFC stimulation [6]. Using EEG combined with the estimation of intracerebral sources of brain activation, a recent study of our group uncovered
less activation in the right-sided DLPFC during speeded and impulsive driving [25]. This finding is in close correspondence with the study by Clark et al. [4] reporting the same lateralization effects in patients with brain lesions in the context of risk behavior and with the later
study of Fecteau et al. [24]. The present study, however, did not replicate this lateralization effect and, thus, rather supports the earlier study of
Fecteau et al. [6]. Considering the data currently available, we have to conclude that the issue of functional DLPFC lateralization in the
context of risk-taking behavior is not entirely understood – studies comparing simultaneous stimulation protocols as
used by Fecteau et al. with stimulation protocols where the reference electrode is positioned on a functionally ineffective
position would contribute to clarify this issue. The propensity of risk-taking behavior has been assumed being linked to the openness to drug experiences and the general
vulnerability for pathological addictive behavior. Several previous studies demonstrated that noninvasive stimulation of the
frontal cortex lessens the craving for typical drugs such as nicotine [26,27] or cocaine [28], hence suppressing the need to initiate reward-related behavior. In a broader sense, this effect corresponds to a more deliberate
style of behavior and is consistent with the main result of the present study. One may argue that the lowering of the driving speed can be explained by a stimulation-induced decline of attention. However,
since anodal tDCS stimulation is known to enhance neural excitability in cortical regions underlying the stimulation electrode,
it seems unlikely to us that anodal stimulation reduces attentional capacities (if anodal tDCS should modulate attention we
would anticipate increased and not decreased attentional functionality). It can be further speculated about general effects
of boredom or tiredness after the stimulation break; however, this effect should be the same after anodal and cathodal stimulation
and can therefore not explain the observed difference between stimulation conditions. In addition, the increased carefulness
of driving that we observed following anodal tDCS was not only characterized by a generally slower driving speed but also
by a reduced number of speed violations, by reduced revolutions per minute and by an enlarged distance to the car driving
ahead. In our opinion this combination of effects points to a more careful driving style rather than to enhanced tiredness. Cathodal stimulation did not lead to a significant alteration of driving behavior. The reasons for this lacking effect
are difficult to explain, thus we can only offer more or less speculative explanations. Given that functional lateralization
of the DLPFC is an unsolved issue, it may well be that the unilaterally evoked hyperpolarization is simply not strong enough
to induce a clear behavioral effect. The hemisphere not stimulated may be equipped to solely prevent the individual from showing
more risky behavior – a mechanism that would be reasonable from an evolutionary perspective. Alternatively, it may be
argued that the mere notice of receiving electrical stimulation (perceived as a slight itching at the beginning of the stimulation)
leads to more careful driving that is independent of the stimulation condition. This effect may have counteracted a potential
enhancement of a risky driving style induced by cathodal stimulation and on the other hand it may have facilitated the behavioral
effect of anodal tDCS. There is one methodological limitation of the tDCS technique that should be addressed. Given the electrode size of 35 cm2,
it is obvious that the spatial resolution is low. Furthermore, when using this technique, one has to deal with remote effects.
Since the brain is a heavily wired system, current spread from the stimulated region to neighboring and interconnected regions
is most likely. Remote effects have been proven in studies combining transcranial brain stimulation (TMS, tDCS) with PET or
fMRI [29,30]. With respect to the present study, it may be that the stimulation of the DLPFC triggered a co-activation of other regions
in the frontal lobe such as the ventromedial or orbitofrontal cortex, which may have influenced task performance after stimulation.
Since we do not know the real extent of the tDCS effect, we cannot disentangle precisely the neurophysiological underpinnings
and the associated psychological processes. Although several methodological problems of tDCS are unsolved so far, there are
several studies available supporting the precision and usability of tDCS [31,32]. Uy and Ridding, for example, showed a specific increase of cortical excitability for the First Dorsal Interosseous (FDI)
muscle after anodal tDCS while the Abductor Digiti Minimi (ADM) and the Flexor Carpi Ulnaris (FCU) were not affected. However,
it was not in the scope of this study to clarify the exact neuroanatomical source of the effect. Further studies combining
tDCS with neuroimaging methods are needed to address this issue properly. It is important to highlight the significance of the present findings for the explanation of aggressive and risky driving
behavior, especially in adolescents. The stimulation of the DLPFC influenced driving behavior. Exactly this site of the brain
matures late in adolescents and might be the cause of deviant driving styles. Regardless of the high behavioral complexity
in this paradigm, we found striking results with high external validity and direct transferability in everyday life. Moreover,
the feasibility of external manipulation of the brain, even on complex behaviors, opens different possibilities for neural
rehabilitation. The authors declare that they have no competing interests. GB participated in the design of the study, performed parts of the statistical analysis and drafted the manuscript. KG
participated in the design, carried out the experiments and performed the statistical analysis. SK participated in the design.
LJ participated in the design, the statistical analysis and helped drafting the manuscript. All authors read and approved
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Journal of neuroscience methods 2003 , 127(2):193-197. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text A SECRET CRIME WAVE IS SWEEPING THE
UNITED STATES AND COUNTRIES ALL OVER THE WORLD. PEOPLE ARE BEING GROUP STALKED
(STALKING BY ORGANIZED GROUPS OF PEOPLE) AND COVERTLY TARGETED WITH DIRECTED
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ARE: MIGRAINE
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SEXUAL STIMULATION THE PSYCHOLOGICAL TOLL OF
THIS HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATION IS ALSO HUGE. IMAGINE BEING UNDER CONSTANT
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AT HOME, WORK AND AUTOMOBILE WHILE A TARGETED PERSON IS AWAY. FAMILY LIFE IS
DESTROYED. WORK PERFORMANCE IS AFFECTED. JOBS AND LIVELIHOOD ARE LOST. SOME HAVE
COMMITTED SUICIDE. WHENEVER THESE CRIMES ARE
REPORTED TO LOCAL OR FEDERAL POLICE, THE VICTIM IS LABELED MENTALLY ILL.
THEREFORE, THE PERPETRATORS CONTINUE FREELY WITH THEIR TORTURE CAMPAIGN ON MANY,
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EDUCATE YOURSELF; VISIT THE FOLLOWING
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NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Nearly 1 in 10 seven- to eight-year-olds hears voices that aren't really there, according to
a new study. But most children who hear voices don't find them troubling or disruptive to their thinking, the study team found. "These
voices in general have a limited impact in daily life," Agna A. Bartels-Velthuis of University Medical Center Groningen in
The Netherlands wrote in an email to Reuters Health. And parents whose children hear voices should not be overly concerned, she added. "In most cases the voices will just disappear.
I would advise them to reassure their child and to watch him or her closely." Up to 16 percent of mentally healthy children and teens may hear voices, the researchers note in the British Journal of
Psychiatry. While hearing voices can signal a heightened risk of schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders in later life,
they add, the "great majority" of young people who have these experiences never become mentally ill. To further investigate how common these "auditory vocal hallucinations" are and whether they are associated with developmental
and behavioral factors, the researchers looked at 3,870 Groningen primary schoolers. All were asked whether they had heard
"one or more voices that only you and no one else could hear" in the past year. Nine percent of the children answered yes. Only 15 percent of these children said the voices caused them serious suffering,
and 19 percent said the voices interfered with their thinking. Boys and girls were equally likely to report hearing voices,
but girls were more likely to report suffering and anxiety due to the voices. While past studies have linked complications in the womb or during early infancy with the likelihood of hearing voices,
Bartels-Velthuis and her team found no such relationship. The researcher said that she and her colleagues had expected that
hearing voices would be more common among urban children than among their rural peers, "but to our surprise, the contrary
was the case in our sample. We have no explanation for this finding." Although urban children were less likely to hear voices, they were more troubled by them, the researchers found. They were
more likely to report hearing several voices at once, voices speaking for a longer time, and voices that interfered with their
thinking. This greater severity suggests that the urban children who heard voices might be at higher risk of going on to develop
psychotic illness, the researchers say. Bartels-Velthuis and her team are now conducting a five-year follow-up study of the children to see how the voice-hearing
plays out and what effect, if any, it has on behavior." SOURCE: The British Journal of Psychiatry, January 2010.
---------------------------- Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. ----------------------------
The research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health, the Office of Naval Research, and the University
of Washington Royalty Fund.
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