An experiment was carried out to investigate whether nicotine ingestion (via cigarette smoking) interacted with alcohol (vodka and tonic) in its effect on statedependent learning (SDL) in humans. On Day I of the 2-day experiment 24 subjects were required to learn a simple route map previously found
Facilitation of learning and state dependency with nicotine
โ Scribed by David M. Warburton; Keith Wesnes; Karen Shergold; Marylin James
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1986
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 585 KB
- Volume
- 89
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0033-3158
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Two studies of nicotine and memory encoding were carried out using a state-dependent design. The first experiment used cigarettes and involved memory for stimuli that could not be encoded phonemically or semantically. The results of this recognition study show that nicotine was facilitating the input of non-phonemicably encodable and non-semanticably encodable information to storage and that nicotine produced state-dependent learning. The second study used nicotine tablets and involved memory for concrete words. The results of the free recall study show that nicotine produced state-dependent learning, that nicotine was facilitating the input of information to storage, but there was no evidence that associative processes had been changed by nicotine. These findings give no support for the suggestion that a cholinergic system in the brain is controlling the encoding of intrinsic cues relating to phonemic and semantic properties of things but not those involving mnemonic encoding by mental imagery, but rather that the cholinergic system is non-specifically involved in encoding.
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Strychnine and strychnine-like compounds have been reported by several investigators to facilitate learning in rats (
## Abstract ## Objective We compared the effects of haloperidol and three atypical antipsychotics (risperidone, olanzapine, and aripiprazole) on nicotine dependence in schizophrenic patients. ## Methods One hundred and thirty nine schizophrenic patients, who began using antipsychotic medication,