Skip to main content
. 2021 Oct 27;15:730134. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2021.730134

Table 3.

Summary of all studies reviewed, listing respective cognitive assessments including the timepoints of the assessment, exact measures, and main outcomes.

References Cognitive assessment (to evaluate tDCS effects on cognition)
Timepoints Measures* Outcomes
Im et al. (2019) Baseline and after 6 months of treatment MMSE, CDR, neurological test battery (digit span test, BNT, RCFT with immediate and delayed recall and recognition, clock drawing test, SVLT with immediate and delayed recall and recognition, contrasting program, Go-no go test, COWAT, Stroop word and color reading) • MMSE and BNT scores significantly improved after active tDCS compared to sham
• Active tDCS resulted in consistent performance (at lower score levels) in contrasting program and Stroop word reading while scores decreased for sham
Sandrini et al. (2016) Learning performance, recall after 48 h and recall after 1 month Learning and recall of a list of 20 words • Significant effect for recall after 48 h: Active tDCS group recalled significantly more words compared to sham
• No significant differences after 1 month
Meinzer et al. (2015) During stimulation (and fMRI) Semantic word retrieval task • tDCS significantly improved semantic word-retrieval performance in the patients to the level of controls
Yun et al. (2016) Baseline and after 3-weeks of treatment MMQ (MMQ-C, MMQ-A, MMQ-S) • MMQ-C significantly increased after active tDCS compared to sham
• Results for MMQ-A were similar to MMQ-C results but not significant between the active and sham groups
• No significant difference for MMQ-S between active tDCS and sham
Fiori et al. (2017) During word retrieval: 1–10 presentations for each picture-word pair (T1-T10) Training, verification, and word retrieval of 20 pseudoword-picture associations (bisyllabic pseudowords) • Bihemispheric: higher number of correct responses in the old group during T10 compared to T1 compared to unihemispheric and sham condition
• No differences between the three conditions in the young age group
• During T10 the young group was significantly more accurate than the old group for unihemispheric and sham; no significant difference in the bihemispehric condition
• Same results for vocal reaction times
Westerberg et al. (2015) Before a 90-min nap and 30 min after Two declarative memory tests (word-pair recall, fast recognition test), 1 non-declarative test (object-priming test) • Recall improvement from pre-nap to post-nap was significantly larger for active so-tDCS compared to sham
• No significant fast recognition or object priming performance difference between active and sham so-tDCS after the nap (both increased significantly)
Cotelli et al. (2014) Baseline (T0), after 2 weeks of treatment (T1), after 3 months (T2), after 6 months (T3) Face-name association task (FNAT), neuropsychological tests (picture naming task, BADA, Rivermead behavioral memory test, Rey auditory verbal learning test, Rey-Osterrieth test, complex figure copy, TMT A and B) • FNAT: active or sham tDCS + memory training group showed significantly improved performances compared to active tDCS + motor training group at T1 and similar for T2, at T3 sham + memory training was still significant compared to the other two groups
• No differences in neuropsychological tests (except an improvement for both tDCS and sham + memory training at T3 in the TMT A score)
Bystad et al. (2016) Before and after stimulation Primary: immediate and delayed recall and recognition of CVLT-II
Secondary: MMSE, clock drawing test, TMT A and B
• CVLT-II: no significant differences between active and sham tDCS but a tendency toward higher improvement in CVLT-II recall after active tDCS
• No significant differences for secondary outcome measures
Lu et al. (2019) Baseline (T0), after 4 weeks of treatment (T1), 4 weeks after post-intervention (T2), 8 weeks after post-intervention (T3) Primary: WM test (RT), ADAS-Cog
Secondary: CVFT, TMT, Chinese neuropsychiatric inventory (CNIP)
• ADAS-Cog: significant improvement for all groups at T1, but no difference between groups, tendency of falling back to baseline at T2 and T3 for all groups
• WM test: significant improvement for all groups until T3, tDCS+WMT showed highest WM capacity at T1 compared to other groups
• CVFT: tDCS-WMT showed a greater improvement in delayed recall compared to single-modality interventions; at T3 only the tDCS+WMT group showed significant enhancement on delayed recall performance over baseline
• tDCS-WMT group showed better performance of logical memory at 12th week
Meinzer et al. (2013) During stimulation (and fMRI) Overt semantic word generation task • During sham younger adults produced significantly less errors than elderly
• Older subjects produced significantly less errors during active tDCS in comparison to sham
• Response times (RTs) were comparable between young and old subjects during sham; no difference in RTs for elderly during active tDCS compared to sham
Khedr et al. (2014) Baseline (T0), after 10 days of treatment (T1), after 1 month (T2), after 2 months (T3) MMSE, WAIS-III (verbal comprehension, arithmetic and digit span, perceptual organization, processing speed) • MMSE: significant improvement in anodal and cathodal tDCS compared to sham (increase of nearly 2 points at T1 and further increase of 2 points at T2 and T3); anodal tDCS group showed better improvement in orientation, registration, attention, and naming object compared to cathodal tDCS
• WAIS-III: only cathodal and not anodal tDCS showed improved performance IQ compared to sham
Prehn et al. (2017) Immediate recall, delayed recall after 6 h, 1 day later and 1 week later Object-location learning task (LOCATO), primary outcome: immediate recall, secondary outcome: delayed recall • Significant effect of SSRI but not of stimulation on immediate recall scores
• Young and old group profited most from atDCS+SSRI
• No significant effects on delayed recall
Manenti et al. (2017) Baseline (after learning), free recall and recognition 48 h and 30 days after learning (and tDCS) Learning, recall, and recognition of a list of 20 words • Significant difference on hit-false alarms score between atDCS and sham at day 30, anodal tDCS significantly improved memory recognition on day 30
• atDCS and sham group showed similar free recall performance at day 30
Ferrucci et al. (2008) Baseline and 30 min after stimulation Word recognition task (WRT), visual attention task • atDCS improved WRT accuracy, while ctDCS significantly worsened it, sham left it unchanged; same results for DI (derived by subtracting false positive from true positive responses)
• No significant differences in RTs in the visual attention task for atDCS or ctDCS compared to sham
Boggio et al. (2012) Baseline (T0), at the end of treatment day 5 (T1), 1 week later (T2), 4 weeks later (T3) MMSE, ADAS-Cog, visual recognition task (VRT), visual attention task (VAT) • No significant effects for MMSE, ADAS-Cog, and VAT scores between active and sham tDCS
• VRT: significant main effect for tDCS performance changes from baseline: 8.99% after anodal and 2.62% after sham tDCS (for T1, T2 and T3)
Cruz Gonzalez et al. (2018) Screening, baseline (after CS training), after sham+CS, after tDCS+CS, post assessment (after CS) Cognitive stimulation (planning ability and divided attention, processing speed and selective attention, short-term memory, calculation and WM), CDR, MoCA • Enhanced cognitive performance in processing speed, selective attention, WM activities, completion time in planning ability and divided attention tasks for active tDCS compared to sham
• Variable CS outcomes but subjects did not show significantly better outcomes in sham intervention compared to baseline CS

The only two studies that did not reveal significant effects are highlighted in gray. Cognitive measures:

*

MMSE, Minimal Mental State Examination; CDR, Clinical Dementia Rating (Morris, 1993); BNT, Boston Naming Test; RCFT, Rey Complex Figure Test; SVLT, Seoul Verbal Learning Test; COWAT, Controlled Oral Word Association Test; MMQ, Multifactorial Memory Questionnaire; BADA, Battery for the Analysis of the Aphasic Deficit; TMT, Trail Making Test; CVLT-II, California verbal learning test second edition; WM, Working Memory; ADAS-Cog, Alzheimer's Disease assessment scale-cognition subscale; CVFT, Category Verbal Fluency Test; WAIS-III, Wechsler Adult Intelligence Subscales; MoCA, Montreal Cognitive Assessment; CS, Cognitive Stimulation.