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Pharmacological manipulations of arousal and memory for emotional material: effects of a single dose of methylphenidate or lorazepam.

Pharmacological manipulations of arousal and memory for emotional material: effects of a single dose of methylphenidate or lorazepam.
Pharmacological manipulations of arousal and memory for emotional material: effects of a single dose of methylphenidate or lorazepam.
Benzodiazepines produce robust impairments of memory alongside global decreases in physiological and subjective arousal. Recently one benzodiazepine (triazolam) has been found to disproportionately impair memory for emotionally arousing material (Buchanan et al., 2003). The extent to which this effect may be mediated by the drug's sedative action is unclear. The present study aimed to assess how pharmacologically decreasing physiological arousal with a benzodiazepine and increasing arousal with a stimulant impact on memory for emotional material. A double-blind placebo controlled trial with 48 volunteers was used to investigate the effects of methylphenidate (40 mg) and Lorazepam (1.5 mg) on incidental memory for emotional material in Cahill and McGaugh's (1995) slide-story task. The slide-story was presented to participants administered either active drug or placebo and retrieval was assessed one week later. Methylphenidate produced stimulant effects and Lorazepam produced sedative effects. Significantly enhanced memory for emotional material was observed in participants given placebo, but not in those given either methylphenidate or Lorazepam. Despite producing opposite effects upon arousal, both methylphenidate and Lorazepam lessen the impact of emotionally arousing material on memory. The effects of Lorazepam add to a growing literature that benzodiazepines may exert their clinical, anxiolytic effects in part via altering emotionaL cognitive function
memory, emotion, arousal, methylphenidate, lorazepam, human
0033-3158
673-683
Brignell, Catherine M.
ec44ecae-8687-4bbb-bc81-8c2c8f27febd
Rosenthal, Joe
6a3e6639-6193-4baf-81fc-ab9df375ea95
Curran, H. Valerie
0bbd99ae-0f3a-4566-947f-54d1b09cab41
Brignell, Catherine M.
ec44ecae-8687-4bbb-bc81-8c2c8f27febd
Rosenthal, Joe
6a3e6639-6193-4baf-81fc-ab9df375ea95
Curran, H. Valerie
0bbd99ae-0f3a-4566-947f-54d1b09cab41

Brignell, Catherine M., Rosenthal, Joe and Curran, H. Valerie (2007) Pharmacological manipulations of arousal and memory for emotional material: effects of a single dose of methylphenidate or lorazepam. Psychopharmacology, 21 (7), 673-683. (doi:10.1177/0269881107077351).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Benzodiazepines produce robust impairments of memory alongside global decreases in physiological and subjective arousal. Recently one benzodiazepine (triazolam) has been found to disproportionately impair memory for emotionally arousing material (Buchanan et al., 2003). The extent to which this effect may be mediated by the drug's sedative action is unclear. The present study aimed to assess how pharmacologically decreasing physiological arousal with a benzodiazepine and increasing arousal with a stimulant impact on memory for emotional material. A double-blind placebo controlled trial with 48 volunteers was used to investigate the effects of methylphenidate (40 mg) and Lorazepam (1.5 mg) on incidental memory for emotional material in Cahill and McGaugh's (1995) slide-story task. The slide-story was presented to participants administered either active drug or placebo and retrieval was assessed one week later. Methylphenidate produced stimulant effects and Lorazepam produced sedative effects. Significantly enhanced memory for emotional material was observed in participants given placebo, but not in those given either methylphenidate or Lorazepam. Despite producing opposite effects upon arousal, both methylphenidate and Lorazepam lessen the impact of emotionally arousing material on memory. The effects of Lorazepam add to a growing literature that benzodiazepines may exert their clinical, anxiolytic effects in part via altering emotionaL cognitive function

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More information

Published date: September 2007
Keywords: memory, emotion, arousal, methylphenidate, lorazepam, human

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 46251
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/46251
ISSN: 0033-3158
PURE UUID: 82487d58-20c6-46c4-aa44-264198a4b89b
ORCID for Catherine M. Brignell: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7768-6272

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Date deposited: 08 Jun 2007
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:42

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Contributors

Author: Joe Rosenthal
Author: H. Valerie Curran

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