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RECENT PRESENTATIONS
Nichols, E.A., Ilan, A.B., Smith, M.E. &
Gevins, A. (2001) Effects of Marijuana on Neurophysiological Correlates
of Working and Intermediate- Term Memory. Annual Meeting of Society
for Neuroscience Conference. November, San Diego.
ABSTRACT
Cannabinoid receptors are abundant in the
frontal cortex and hippocampus, areas crucial for attentional control,
working memory (WM), and the creation of more lasting memories.
Although knowledge of marijuana's neurobiological effects has proliferated,
research on marijuana's impact on human cognitive brain function
has not progressed as quickly. To examine marijuana's effects on
neurophysiological measures of working and recent memory, a double-blind,
counterbalanced study was performed in which 40-channel EEG recordings
were obtained from N=10 casual marijuana users before and after
smoking active (3.45% THC) or placebo (0.006% THC) marijuana. A
spatial N-back task was used to measure WM ability. Intermediate-term
memory over a period of 5-10 minutes was measured with a word recognition
task. Objective and subjective measures of intoxication increased
after smoking marijuana, but alertness and motivation were unchanged.
After smoking marijuana reaction time in the WM task increased,
as did EEG alpha (8-11 Hz) power, a signal inversely proportional
to task-related cortical activation. Amplitudes of the N1 and P3
event-related potentials (ERPs) were attenuated, implying a reduction
in attentional resources allocated to task performance after marijuana
smoking. Marijuana slowed responses in the word recognition task,
decreased subjects' ability to discriminate previously studied "old"
words from distractors, and decreased the amplitude of the N1 and
the ERP slow wave, suggesting an impairment in memory for recent
events. The results indicate that marijuana has profound effects
on neurophysiological systems regulating WM and delayed recognition.
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