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Selective dissociations of sedation and amnesia following ingestion of diazepam

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Abstract

Forty-eight healthy volunteers received 0.2 mg/kg oral diazepam or a placebo in a double-blind manner. The effect of the drug on memory was assessed by the free recall of unrelated word lists, and arousal was assessed by subjective ratings of drowsiness, multiple trials of a digit cancellation task, and the rate at which subjects rehearsed aloud items from the word lists. As expected, diazepam, depressed both memory functioning and all three measures of arousal. However, within the diazepam group, rehearsal rate was the only arousal measure that correlated with performance on the recall task. When looking at change scores, or the degree to which performance deteriorated from baseline to the diazepam condition, digit cancellation reduction was the only arousal measure that correlated with recall deterioration. Analyses also revealed that the three arousal measures did not correlate with each other. Results support the view that the arousal/attentional system is composed of partially independent subsystems with varying relationships to memory functioning.

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Rich, J.B., Brown, G.G. Selective dissociations of sedation and amnesia following ingestion of diazepam. Psychopharmacology 106, 346–350 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02245416

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02245416

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