ePoster

TRANSCRANIAL ELECTRICAL STIMULATION MODULATES POWER AND FIELD-FIELD COHERENCY IN MACAQUE VISUAL CORTEX

Niloy Maityand 1 co-author

Indian Institute of Science

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS02-07PM-583

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS02-07PM-583

Poster preview

TRANSCRANIAL ELECTRICAL STIMULATION MODULATES POWER AND FIELD-FIELD COHERENCY IN MACAQUE VISUAL CORTEX poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS02-07PM-583

Abstract

Transcranial direct or alternating current stimulation (tDCS or tACS) are used for the treatment of several cognitive disorders, many of which are due to imbalances in excitatory-inhibitory (E-I) interactions, but how stimulation affects the underlying neural network remains an open question. In the primary visual cortex (V1), E-I interactions due to presentation of large gratings induce slow (20 Hz-35 Hz) and fast gamma (40 Hz-70 Hz) oscillations, which weaken with ageing and neurodegeneration. However, the effect of long duration tDCS/tACS on stimulus-induced gamma is unknown.
We applied 3 mA cathodal tDCS and ±1.5 mA or ±2.5 mA 20 Hz tACS targeting V1 for 20 minutes, while full-screen gratings were shown to two monkeys before, during and after stimulation. We analyzed the power and field-field coherency (FFC), a measure of phase consistency, to assess changes in power and connectivity due to tDCS/tACS.
We found an increase in fast gamma power (40 Hz-70 Hz) and FFC (60 Hz–100 Hz) with tDCS post stimulation which persisted for about 1.5 hours. This observation aligns with a previous finding that during tDCS, inter-areal coherency is enhanced in the gamma range. Conversely, tACS at 20 Hz reduced slow gamma (20 Hz-35 Hz) power and FFC (40 Hz–60 Hz), although the effect was weaker and less consistent across monkeys.
Long-lasting changes in power and coherency within a brain area might modulate information processing, learning, and adaptation. Our findings illuminate the potential to modulate synchrony via transcranial electrical stimulation that outlasts the stimulation period.

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