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
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:
Subject Manager
PSYK250: Bachelor's Thesis - General Psychology (Bachelor's Thesis - General Psychology | University of Bergen (uib.no)
-Spring 2024-
Teaching
PSYK111: Introduction to psychology and the history of psychology (https://www4.uib.no/emner/PSYK111):
"The Biological Basis of Behavior"
"Sensation and Perception"
"Consciousness and Learning"-From fall 2023 to present-
PSYK207: Learning and Behavioral Psychology (Læring og atferdspsykologi | Universitetet i Bergen (uib.no):
"Sniffy Seminars + technical help"
-From fall 2023 to present-
MAPSYK336: Cognitive Neuroscience (Cognitive Neuroscience | University of Bergen (uib.no):
"Action Seminar"
"Memory Seminar"-From fall 2023 to present-
PSYK250: Bachelor's Thesis - General Psychology | University of Bergen (uib.no:
"APA Seminar"
-From spring 2023 to present-PRPSYK304: Cognitive Neuroscience (Kognitiv nevrovitenskap | Universitetet i Bergen (uib.no):
"Electrical Brain Stimulation"
"Hemispheric Specialization"
-Spring 2024-
LOGO319: Research Methods and Research Ethics (Forskingsmetode og forskningsetikk | Universitetet i Bergen (uib.no):
"Experimental Design"
-Fall 2024-
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
Projects
Project 1: tDCS Treatment Reduces, whilst rTMS Treatment Increases EEG Spike Rates with Refractory Occipital Lobe Epilepsy: A Case Study (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
Project 4: tDCS: Auditory False Perceptions in Healthy Participants