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RECENT PUBLICATIONS
Ilan, A.B., Smith, M.E., & Gevins, A.
(2004). Effects of marijuana on neurophysiological signals of working
and episodic memory. Psychopharmacology, 176, 214-222.
ABSTRACT
Rationale: The primary psychoactive constituent
of marijuana, Delta9-THC, activates cannabinoid receptors, which
are especially abundant in the frontal cortex and hippocampus. Acute
marijuana smoking can disrupt working memory (WM) and episodic memory
(EM) functions that are known to rely on these regions. However,
the effects of marijuana on the brain activity accompanying such
cognitive processes remain largely unexplored.
Objectives: To examine such effects on performance and neurophysiological
signals of these functions, EEG recordings were obtained from ten
subjects (5M, 5F) performing cognitive tasks before and after smoking
marijuana (3.45% Delta9-THC) or a placebo. WM was assessed with
a spatial N-back task, and EM was evaluated with a test requiring
recognition of words after a 5-10 min delay between study and test.
Results: Marijuana increased heart rate and decreased global theta
band EEG power, consistent with increased autonomic arousal. Responses
in the WM task were slower and less accurate after smoking marijuana,
accompanied by reduced alpha band EEG reactivity in response to
increased task difficulty. In the EM task, marijuana was associated
with an increased tendency to erroneously identify distracter words
as having been previously studied. In both tasks, marijuana attenuated
stimulus-locked event-related potentials (ERPs).
Conclusions: The results suggest that marijuana disrupted both sustained
and transient attention processes resulting in impaired memory task
performance. In subjects most affected by marijuana a pronounced
ERP difference between previously studied words and new distracter
words was also reduced, suggesting disruption of neural mechanisms
underlying memory for recent study episodes.
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