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The Influence of GVS on Mental Transformation

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Focus of Study: Higher Cognition and the Vestibular System
Interventions
Device: Galvanic Vestibular Stimulation
Registration Number
NCT02979314
Lead Sponsor
University of Zurich
Brief Summary

Corroboratory behavioral evidence showed interaction effects between vestibular stimulation and egocentric transformation.

The investigators here examine in healthy participants, whether there are shared brain mechanisms underlying galvanic vestibular stimulation, illusory self-motion and egocentric transformation, as well as their interaction.

It is hypothesized that the GVS induced illusory self-motion dampens the ability to perform egocentric mental transformation.

Detailed Description

Theories of embodied mental rotation suggest overlapping processes between real body and egocentric mental transformations. Corroboratory behavioral evidence showed interaction effects between vestibular stimulation and egocentric transformation. Yet, no study so far has investigated which cortical areas are involved in vestibular processing and/or illusory self-motion and mental transformation tasks within the same participants. This however seems crucial, as important individual differences exist for both mental transformation abilities as well as in subjective perception of artificial vestibular stimulation.

The primary objective is to reveal which brain area(s) are involved in the interaction of illusory self-motion (as induced by galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS)) and egocentric mental transformation, as compared to no illusory self-motion or object-based mental transformation. It is hypothesized that the GVS induced illusory self-motion dampens the ability to perform egocentric mental transformation more than object-based mental transformation.

As previous behavioral studies on such an interaction were always done in a sitting position, a secondary objective is to first replicate previous behavioral mental rotation studies that used GVS, in the Magnetic Resonance (MR) -scanner comparable setting. Moreover, as no brain imaging study so far has investigated subjective illusory motion experience induced by GVS, illusory self-motion will be measured and included in the statistical model to find specific brain regions modulating the illusory self-motion perception.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Male
Target Recruitment
32
Inclusion Criteria
  • Male
  • Written informed consent by the participant
  • Right handed
Exclusion Criteria
  • possession of metallic implants, cardiac pacemakers, neuro-stimulators, metal splinter injuries
  • claustrophobia
  • no ability to lie still in the scanner, e.g. a cold leading to frequent sneezing and subsequent head movements
  • history of neurological or psychiatric disorder
  • hearing problems
  • concomitant medication
  • strong motion sensitivity
  • vestibular deficits

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Galvanic Vestibular StimulationGalvanic Vestibular StimulationA standard placement of the electrodes will be used for GVS and sham, placed on the mastoids. Weak currents up to maximally 3 mA will be used (tested before in each participant individually, and expected mean current will be around 1.5 mA). Previous studies have used Magnetic Resonance (MR) compatible GVS without reporting any discomfort for the participants, however weak sensations of nausea could be possible and in case that they are disturbing for the participants the experiment will be aborted. Continuous stimulation for up to 30min with intensities of 1-1.5 mA is generally considered as safe and free of any considerable side effects.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Blood Oxygen-Level Dependent (BOLD) -signal change in response to egocentric mental transformationone day

The Relative BOLD-signal change in response to egocentric mental transformation during GVS versus mental transformation during sham stimulation will be measured in an functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) paradigm

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
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