So I decided to post on DU!
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/01/22/nzap22.xml&sSheet=/portal/2005/01/22/ixportal.htmlSnap! As the machine fires the first magnetic pulse, my scalp feels like it is being pinched and puckered. After rotating a knob on a box of electronics, Prof John Rothwell holds a giant black key against my head once again. Crack! Now it feels like someone is tapping my forehead with a pen. From the inside. Curious.
Another twiddle. Snap, snap, snap! My arm becomes possessed. It twitches and jerks with each flick of the switch. Prof Rothwell is satisfied. He is ready to boost my brain by zapping my temporal lobe with bursts of magnetic energy.
I am in a laboratory in the Institute of Neurology in Queen Square, London, having the top of my brain "tickled", as Prof Rothwell calls it, using transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), one of the trendiest tools in neuroscience.
This week, in the journal Neuron, Prof Rothwell and colleagues at University College London describe how they have improved TMS so that it can boost and fade specific parts of the brain for more than an hour. All it takes is 40 seconds of magnetic stimulation. Initial safety tests reveal no long-lasting effects. "I have had it done lots of times," says Prof Rothwell. For me, TMS was disconcerting rather than painful. Mild headache and transient light-headedness can sometimes result, though not in my case.