Dissociating Semantic Integration and Inhibitory Control in the Remote Associates Test: A tDCS-EEG Study
Metadatos
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Taylor and Francis
Materia
semantic memory inhibitory control EEG neuromodulation tDCS creativity creative problem-solving
Fecha
2024-06-06Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: Lezama, R., Gómez-Ariza, C. J., & Bajo, M. T. (2024). Dissociating Semantic Integration and Inhibitory Control in the Remote Associates Test: A tDCS-EEG Study. Creativity Research Journal, 1-27. https://doi.org/10.1080/10400419.2024.2373593
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Universities (Grant FPU019/02694); Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation PGC2018-093786-B-I00, PID2021-122979OB-C21, PID2021-127728NB-I00Resumen
Neuromodulation was utilized here to investigate the distinct involvement of two recognized
cortical hubs for semantic integration (the left anterior temporal lobe, lATL) and inhibitory control
(the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, rDLPFC) in creative problem-solving. Participants were
presented with a list of category-exemplar words, selectively recalled some of them, and then
solved a set of RAT problems. Selective retrieval was introduced to trigger inhibitory control over
competitors. Critically, some RAT problems could be solved with words from the previous phases
of the experiment, including words that might be less accessible due to inhibition. Other problems,
however, could only be solved with unpresented words. Experiment 1 showed that anodal tDCS
over the lATL had a negative effect on the production of correct responses to baseline RAT
problems, but not on those that required inhibited solutions. Experiment 2 produced the reverse
pattern with cathodal tDCS over the rDLPFC. Resting-state EEG recordings were obtained before
and after delivering tDCS, which also revealed specific tDCS-induced changes in frequency bands
depending on the site of stimulation. Overall, these findings provide support for the involvement
of semantic and control processes in creative problem solving that are linked to different brain
networks.