Department of Psychiatry, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
PLoS One. 2012;7(5):e36820. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0036820. Epub 2012 May 11.
While the effects of cannabis use on retrospective memory have been extensively examined, only a limited number of studies have focused on the links between cannabis use and prospective memory. We conducted two studies to examine the links between cannabis use and both time-based and event-based prospective memory as well as potential mechanisms underlying these links. For the first study, 805 students completed an online survey designed to assess cannabis consumption, problems with cannabis use indicative of a disorder, and frequency of experiencing prospective memory failures. The results showed small to moderate sized correlations between cannabis consumption, problems with cannabis use, and prospective memory. However, a series of mediation analyses revealed that correlations between problems with cannabis use and prospective memory were driven by self-reported problems with retrospective memory. For the second study, 48 non-users (who had never used cannabis), 48 experimenters (who had used cannabis five or fewer times in their lives), and 48 chronic users (who had used cannabis at least three times a week for one year) were administered three objective prospective memory tests and three self-report measures of prospective memory. The results revealed no objective deficits in prospective memory associated with chronic cannabis use. In contrast, chronic cannabis users reported experiencing more internally-cued prospective memory failures. Subsequent analyses revealed that this effect was driven by self-reported problems with retrospective memory as well as by use of alcohol and other drugs. Although our samples were not fully characterized with respect to variables such as neurological disorders and family history of substance use disorders, leaving open the possibility that these variables may play a role in the detected relationships, the present findings indicate that cannabis use has a modest effect on self-reported problems with prospective memory, with a primary problem with retrospective memory appearing to underlie this relationship.
虽然大麻使用对回溯记忆的影响已经被广泛研究,但只有少数研究关注大麻使用与前瞻性记忆之间的联系。我们进行了两项研究,以检验大麻使用与基于时间和基于事件的前瞻性记忆之间的联系,以及这些联系的潜在机制。
在第一项研究中,805 名学生完成了一项在线调查,旨在评估大麻消费、大麻使用问题,以及前瞻性记忆失败的频率。结果显示,大麻消费、大麻使用问题与前瞻性记忆之间存在小到中等大小的相关性。然而,一系列中介分析表明,大麻使用问题与前瞻性记忆之间的相关性是由自我报告的回溯记忆问题驱动的。
在第二项研究中,48 名非使用者(从未使用过大麻)、48 名实验者(一生中使用大麻不超过五次)和 48 名慢性使用者(每周至少使用大麻三次,持续一年)接受了三项客观前瞻性记忆测试和三项前瞻性记忆自我报告测量。结果显示,慢性大麻使用者在前瞻性记忆方面没有明显的客观缺陷。相比之下,慢性大麻使用者报告说经历了更多的内源性线索前瞻性记忆失败。后续分析表明,这种效应是由自我报告的回溯记忆问题以及酒精和其他药物的使用驱动的。
虽然我们的样本在神经障碍和物质使用障碍家族史等变量方面没有得到充分描述,因此不能排除这些变量可能在检测到的关系中起作用,但目前的研究结果表明,大麻使用对自我报告的前瞻性记忆问题有适度的影响,主要是回溯记忆问题,这似乎是这种关系的基础。