Accessibility of cortical regions to focal TES: Dependence on spatial position, safety, and practical constraints

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Accessibility of cortical regions to focal TES : Dependence on spatial position, safety, and practical constraints. / Saturnino, Guilherme Bicalho; Siebner, Hartwig Roman; Thielscher, Axel; Madsen, Kristoffer Hougaard.

In: NeuroImage, Vol. 203, 116183, 2019.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Saturnino, GB, Siebner, HR, Thielscher, A & Madsen, KH 2019, 'Accessibility of cortical regions to focal TES: Dependence on spatial position, safety, and practical constraints', NeuroImage, vol. 203, 116183. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2019.116183

APA

Saturnino, G. B., Siebner, H. R., Thielscher, A., & Madsen, K. H. (2019). Accessibility of cortical regions to focal TES: Dependence on spatial position, safety, and practical constraints. NeuroImage, 203, [116183]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2019.116183

Vancouver

Saturnino GB, Siebner HR, Thielscher A, Madsen KH. Accessibility of cortical regions to focal TES: Dependence on spatial position, safety, and practical constraints. NeuroImage. 2019;203. 116183. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2019.116183

Author

Saturnino, Guilherme Bicalho ; Siebner, Hartwig Roman ; Thielscher, Axel ; Madsen, Kristoffer Hougaard. / Accessibility of cortical regions to focal TES : Dependence on spatial position, safety, and practical constraints. In: NeuroImage. 2019 ; Vol. 203.

Bibtex

@article{f939d24ceb4c47aa8d4b0b222d202b19,
title = "Accessibility of cortical regions to focal TES: Dependence on spatial position, safety, and practical constraints",
abstract = "Transcranial electric stimulation (TES) can modulate intrinsic neural activity in the brain by injecting weak currents through electrodes attached to the scalp. TES has been widely used as a neuroscience tool to investigate how behavioural and physiological variables of brain function are modulated by electric stimulation of specific brain regions. For an unambiguous interpretation of TES experiments, it is important that the electric fields can be steered towards one or several brain regions-of-interest. However, the conductive proprieties of the human head impose inherent physical limitations on how focal the electric fields in the brain produced by multi-electrode TES can be. As a rule of thumb, it is not feasible to selectively target deep brain areas with TES, although focusing the field in some specific deeper locations might be possible due to favourable conductive properties in the surrounding tissue. In the present study, we first propose a computationally efficient method for the automatic determination of electrode placements and stimulation intensities to optimally affect a given target position. We provide a robust implementation of the optimization procedure that is able to adhere to safety constraints, while explicitly controlling both the number of active electrodes and the angular deviation of the field in the target area relative to the desired field direction. Leveraging the high computational efficiency of our method, we systematically assess the achievable focality of multi-electrode TES for all cortex positions, thereby investigating the dependence on the chosen constraints. Our results provide comprehensive insight into the limitations regarding the achievable TES dose and focality that are imposed by the biophysical constraints and the safety considerations of TES.",
keywords = "Electric field simulations, Focality, Mapping, Optimization, Transcranial electric stimulation",
author = "Saturnino, {Guilherme Bicalho} and Siebner, {Hartwig Roman} and Axel Thielscher and Madsen, {Kristoffer Hougaard}",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1016/j.neuroimage.2019.116183",
language = "English",
volume = "203",
journal = "NeuroImage",
issn = "1053-8119",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Accessibility of cortical regions to focal TES

T2 - Dependence on spatial position, safety, and practical constraints

AU - Saturnino, Guilherme Bicalho

AU - Siebner, Hartwig Roman

AU - Thielscher, Axel

AU - Madsen, Kristoffer Hougaard

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Transcranial electric stimulation (TES) can modulate intrinsic neural activity in the brain by injecting weak currents through electrodes attached to the scalp. TES has been widely used as a neuroscience tool to investigate how behavioural and physiological variables of brain function are modulated by electric stimulation of specific brain regions. For an unambiguous interpretation of TES experiments, it is important that the electric fields can be steered towards one or several brain regions-of-interest. However, the conductive proprieties of the human head impose inherent physical limitations on how focal the electric fields in the brain produced by multi-electrode TES can be. As a rule of thumb, it is not feasible to selectively target deep brain areas with TES, although focusing the field in some specific deeper locations might be possible due to favourable conductive properties in the surrounding tissue. In the present study, we first propose a computationally efficient method for the automatic determination of electrode placements and stimulation intensities to optimally affect a given target position. We provide a robust implementation of the optimization procedure that is able to adhere to safety constraints, while explicitly controlling both the number of active electrodes and the angular deviation of the field in the target area relative to the desired field direction. Leveraging the high computational efficiency of our method, we systematically assess the achievable focality of multi-electrode TES for all cortex positions, thereby investigating the dependence on the chosen constraints. Our results provide comprehensive insight into the limitations regarding the achievable TES dose and focality that are imposed by the biophysical constraints and the safety considerations of TES.

AB - Transcranial electric stimulation (TES) can modulate intrinsic neural activity in the brain by injecting weak currents through electrodes attached to the scalp. TES has been widely used as a neuroscience tool to investigate how behavioural and physiological variables of brain function are modulated by electric stimulation of specific brain regions. For an unambiguous interpretation of TES experiments, it is important that the electric fields can be steered towards one or several brain regions-of-interest. However, the conductive proprieties of the human head impose inherent physical limitations on how focal the electric fields in the brain produced by multi-electrode TES can be. As a rule of thumb, it is not feasible to selectively target deep brain areas with TES, although focusing the field in some specific deeper locations might be possible due to favourable conductive properties in the surrounding tissue. In the present study, we first propose a computationally efficient method for the automatic determination of electrode placements and stimulation intensities to optimally affect a given target position. We provide a robust implementation of the optimization procedure that is able to adhere to safety constraints, while explicitly controlling both the number of active electrodes and the angular deviation of the field in the target area relative to the desired field direction. Leveraging the high computational efficiency of our method, we systematically assess the achievable focality of multi-electrode TES for all cortex positions, thereby investigating the dependence on the chosen constraints. Our results provide comprehensive insight into the limitations regarding the achievable TES dose and focality that are imposed by the biophysical constraints and the safety considerations of TES.

KW - Electric field simulations

KW - Focality

KW - Mapping

KW - Optimization

KW - Transcranial electric stimulation

U2 - 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2019.116183

DO - 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2019.116183

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 31525498

AN - SCOPUS:85072691057

VL - 203

JO - NeuroImage

JF - NeuroImage

SN - 1053-8119

M1 - 116183

ER -

ID: 238433053