Tine Tronrud

Position

PhD Candidate, at IBMP, where I am part of the Brain Stimulation Research Group. I work on projects that investigate non-invasive brain stimulation and its effects on cognitive and neurological processes

Affiliation

Short info

My research focuses on non-invasive brain stimulation techniques, exploring their potential to treat neurological and psychiatric conditions in patients unresponsive to traditional therapies. I work on refining protocols to improve their effectiveness and accessibility as treatment options.
Research

I am a PhD candidate at IBMP, where I am part of the Brain Stimulation Research Group. I work on projects that investigate non-invasive brain stimulation techniques, primarily transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), to assess their effectiveness as treatment methods for mood/affective conditions, auditory verbal hallucinations and epilepsy:

 

Teaching

University of Bergen:







 

Publications

Tronrud, T., Hirnstein, M., Eichele, T., Kolstad, E., & Marquardt, L. (2025). Transcranial direct current stimulation treatment reduces, while repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation treatment increases electroencephalography spike rates with refractory occipital lobe epilepsy: A case study. Epilepsia Open. http://doi.org/10.1002/epi4.70024

Tronrud, T., I. Kusztrits, J. Laloyaux, and M. Hirnstein (2025). Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation Does Not Increase Auditory False Perceptions in Healthy Participants. European Journal of Neuroscience 62, no. 12: e70361. https://doi.org/10.1111/ejn.70361.

Projects

Project 1:  tDCS Treatment Reduces, whilst rTMS Treatment Increases EEG Spike Rates with Refractory Occipital Lobe Epilepsy: A Case Study (published).

Project 4: Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation Does Not Increase Auditory False Perceptions in Healthy Participants (published).



Tentative Projects:


Project 2: Improving the Existing rTMS Treatment by Identifying Treatment Responder in Patients with Depression

Project 3: Exploring the Potential of rTMS in Positive/negative Moods