| |
RECENT PRESENTATIONS
Ilan, A.B., Nichols, E.A., Smith, M.E., Gevins,
A. (2002). Acute Effects of Marijuana on Neurophysiological Signals
of Memory and Focused Attention. Cognitive Neuroscience Society
Ninth Annual Meeting. April, San Francisco.
ABSTRACT
The medial-prefrontal cortex and hippocampus
are crucial for attentional control, working memory (WM), and the
creation of more lasting memories. Acute marijuana usage often diminishes
attention and memory capabilities, likely by altering the activity
of CB1 cannabinoid receptors in these brain regions. To examine
marijuana's effects on neurophysiological measures of WM, focused
attention, and recent memory, a double-blind, counterbalanced study
was performed in which 40-channel EEG recordings were obtained before
and after 10 casual marijuana users smoked active or placebo marijuana.
A spatial N-back task was used to measure WM and focused attention,
and 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. Marijuana smoking reduced EEG power in the theta
band (4-6 Hz) but increased power in the alpha band (8-11 Hz), a
signal inversely proportional to task-related cortical activation.
Amplitudes of N1, P3, and slow wave event-related potentials (ERPs)
decreased, also suggesting that marijuana smoking reduced the attentional
resources allocated to task performance. In sum, marijuana slowed
behavioral responses, altered neuronal synchronization in the cortex,
and attenuated attention-related ERP amplitudes. Marijuana also
appeared to hamper the ability to distinguish between words not
recently seen and those presented 5 minutes earlier. Marijuana's
impairment of attention and memory may result from alterations in
the fine-tuning of synchronized, rhythmic neuronal populations in
brain areas with dense concentrations of CB1 receptors. Supported
by NIDA.
Back to Presentations
|