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This study will involve an experiment in individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) comparing their performance on a working memory task before, during and after non-invasive brain stimulation (tDCS) compared to a control group in a 3x3 factorial design. How the stimulation affects performance on the task will be assessed, along with the impact of the intervention on the individuals.
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Many studies have examined working memory in people with autism spectrum disorder as working memory deficits in individuals with autism spectrum disorder leads to multiple difficulties associated with behaviour regulation, cognitive flexibility, abstract thinking, and focusing and sustaining attention. Evidence suggests that transcranial Direct Current Stimulation on the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex leads to an increase in working memory performance in typically developing individuals. This may have important benefits for people with autism spectrum disorder since autism spectrum disorder is known to be associated with working memory deficiencies. This study will build on a pilot study conducted in 2014, the experiment tested participants working memory scores on an N-back test, after receiving anodal (positive stimulation) stimulation for 15 minutes over the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. This task requires the participant to perform multiple cognitive operations, including encoding of new stimuli, updating and maintaining past stimuli, and recognising and responding to whether each new stimulus matches the three-back stimulus. Participants are presented with a random set of ten letters (from A-Z). A different letter will be displayed every 2s, participants will be required to respond (key press 1) if the presented letter was the same as the letter presented three stimuli previously (a target). If it was not a target, participants were required to respond with key press 2. In this test, a total of 30 correct responses are possible. Participants will perform the task three times to reduce variability. Accuracy (number of correct responses), error rate (number of incorrect responses), and reaction time (interval between target presentation and pressing 1 or 2) will be recorded. Based on the findings from the pilot study, a full study will be conducted to investigate the effects of anodal transcranial Direct Current Stimulation on adults with high-functioning autism, as well as test whether the effects of transcranial Direct Current Stimulation on dorsolateral prefrontal cortex is dependent on polarity (anodal versus cathodal (negative stimulation) stimulation).
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50 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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