Alcohol and state-dependent learning.

Substance and alcohol actions/misuse Pub Date : 1983-01-01
G Lowe
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Abstract

This paper reviews several attempts to demonstrate state-dependent (St.D) effects from alcohol and reports a study in which the subject's state (sober or intoxicated) produces a 'dissociation' decrement in recall performance only when the drug state differed from that under which the original learning took place. Thirty-two subjects were used in a 2 x 2 design with moderate doses of alcohol (mean BAC = 81 mg/100 ml). In a second study, with 16 volunteers, alcohol was administered immediately after learning in order to distinguish between 'stimulus' and 'storage' hypotheses. Greater retention was found for those subjects whose drug states were the same in memory consolidation and retrieval. Thus, an alcohol state effective during the memory consolidation interval following acquisition appears to be a sufficient condition for producing St.D learning. In this context, St.D learning might be better termed state-dependent memory storage and retrieval. The implications of these results for the aetiology and treatment of alcohol dependence are discussed.

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酒精和状态依赖性学习。
本文回顾了几种证明酒精状态依赖性(St.D)效应的尝试,并报道了一项研究,该研究表明,只有当药物状态与原始学习发生时不同时,受试者的状态(清醒或醉酒)才会在回忆表现中产生“解离”下降。32名受试者采用2 × 2设计,使用中等剂量的酒精(平均BAC = 81 mg/100 ml)。在第二项研究中,16名志愿者在学习后立即服用酒精,以区分“刺激”假说和“储存”假说。药物状态相同的受试者在记忆巩固和提取方面表现出更强的保留能力。因此,在习得后的记忆巩固期间有效的酒精状态似乎是产生st - d学习的充分条件。在这种情况下,st -d学习可以更好地称为状态依赖记忆的存储和检索。这些结果对酒精依赖的病因和治疗的意义进行了讨论。
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