## Abstract Previous research suggests that MDMA users are impaired in various aspects of cognitive functioning, however, it remains unclear whether they might experience deficits in established measures of verbal working memory functioning. In the present study current and previous MDMA users were
Visuo-spatial working memory deficits in current and former users of MDMA (‘ecstasy’)
✍ Scribed by Michelle Wareing; John E. Fisk; Philip Murphy; Catharine Montgomery
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 93 KB
- Volume
- 20
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6222
- DOI
- 10.1002/hup.670
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Verbal working memory and executive deficits have been observed in ecstasy users. The present study sought to establish whether these also extended to visuo-spatial working memory. Thirty-six current ecstasy users, 12 former users (abstinent for at least 6 months) and 31 individuals that had never used ecstasy were tested on a maintenance plus type visuo-spatial working memory task. The task required participants to recall a sequence of specially marked cells in a four-by-four matrix display while at the same time performing a concurrent visual judgement task. Both the current and former user groups registered impairments relative to nonusers. These remained significant following statistical controls for a range of potentially confounding variables including the use of various other drugs during the 3 months prior to testing. Users were unimpaired on a simple spatial span measure suggesting that the deficits observed reflected the executive aspects of the spatial working memory task. Also consistent with executive involvement, statistical controls for measures of verbal working memory performance (computation span) removed half of the ecstasy-related variance in spatial working memory. The possibility that the pattern of results obtained might reflect some general impairment in information processing efficiency is discussed.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Chronic use of MDMA (3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine), or 'ecstasy', is associated with significant cognitive impairments, particularly in laboratory and field tests of memory for previously encoded material. Less is known about the effects of a history of MDMA use on aspects of everyday cognitive
## Abstract A meta‐analysis was carried out on the possible functional neurotoxic effects of ecstasy use in humans on verbal short‐term memory (STM), verbal long‐term memory (LTM), processing speed (RT) and % errors (attention). To that end studies were found on the effect of ecstasy that fulfilled
## Objective The aim of this study was to determine the effect of light long‐term ecstasy consumption on verbal short‐term and working memory and to identify the cognitive processes contributing to task performance. ## Method Electroencephalogram was recorded while ecstasy users (__N__ = 11), pol