Albertella Lucy, Le Pelley Mike E, Copeland Jan
National Cannabis Prevention and Information Centre.
School of Psychology, UNSW.
Exp Clin Psychopharmacol. 2016 Oct;24(5):313-319. doi: 10.1037/pha0000085. Epub 2016 Jun 23.
This study examined the relationship between cannabis use, sex, and attentional inhibition in a sample of 325 young Australians (194 women and 131 men) aged 14 to 24 years. Participants completed an online assessment, which included self-report measures of alcohol and other drug use, psychological distress, schizotypy, and location-based negative priming. Participants who had never used cannabis (n = 163) were compared with occasional (n = 118) and frequent (n = 44) cannabis users, with frequent use being defined as having used cannabis at least weekly in the past 6 months. There was a significant interaction between sex and cannabis use, with follow-up analyses indicating that frequent cannabis use was associated with reduced negative priming among females only. This study highlights the role of sex in influencing how cannabis use interacts with cognition and suggests that females who use cannabis frequently may be more likely than males to exhibit deficits in attentional inhibition. (PsycINFO Database Record
本研究在325名年龄在14至24岁的澳大利亚年轻人(194名女性和131名男性)样本中,考察了大麻使用、性别与注意力抑制之间的关系。参与者完成了一项在线评估,其中包括酒精和其他药物使用、心理困扰、精神分裂症型人格以及基于位置的负启动效应的自我报告测量。将从未使用过大麻的参与者(n = 163)与偶尔使用(n = 118)和频繁使用(n = 44)大麻的参与者进行比较,频繁使用被定义为在过去6个月中至少每周使用一次大麻。性别与大麻使用之间存在显著的交互作用,后续分析表明,频繁使用大麻仅与女性负启动效应降低有关。本研究强调了性别在影响大麻使用与认知相互作用方式方面的作用,并表明频繁使用大麻的女性可能比男性更有可能表现出注意力抑制缺陷。(PsycINFO数据库记录)