Zamroziewicz Marta, Raskin Sarah A, Tennen Howard, Austad Carol S, Wood Rebecca M, Fallahi Carolyn R, Dager Alecia D, Sawyer Broderick, Leen Samantha, Pearlson Godfrey D
Department of Psychology.
Department of Community Medicine and Health Care, University of Connecticut School of Medicine.
Neuropsychology. 2017 Feb;31(2):191-199. doi: 10.1037/neu0000313. Epub 2016 Nov 14.
Traditional college students are at a critical juncture in the development of prospective memory (PM). Their brains are vulnerable to the effects of alcohol.
There were 123 third and fourth year college students, 19-23 years old, who completed the Self-Rating Effects of Alcohol (SREA), Modified Timeline Follow-back (TFLB), Brief Young Adult Alcohol Consequences Scale (BYAACS), and Alcohol Effects Questionnaire (AEQ) once per month on a secure online database, as reported elsewhere (Dager et al., 2013). Data from the 6 months immediately before memory testing were averaged. In a single testing session participants were administered the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview-Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorders-Fourth Edition-Text Revision (MINI-DSM-IV-TR), measures of PM (event-based and time-based), and retrospective memory (RM). Based on the average score of six consecutive monthly responses to the SREA, TLFB, and AEQ, students were classified as nondrinkers, light drinkers, or heavy drinkers (as defined previously; Dager et al., 2013). Alcohol-induced amnesia (blackout) was measured with the BYAACS.
We found a relationship between these alcohol use classifications and time-based PM, such that participants who were classified as heavier drinkers were more likely to forget to perform the time-based PM task. We also found that self-reported alcohol-induced amnesia (blackouts) during the month immediately preceding memory testing was associated with lower performance on the event-based PM task. Participants' ability to recall the RM tasks suggested the PM items were successfully encoded even when they were not carried out, and we observed no relationship between alcohol use and RM performance.
Heavy alcohol use in college students may be related to impairments in PM. (PsycINFO Database Record
传统大学生正处于前瞻性记忆(PM)发展的关键阶段。他们的大脑易受酒精影响。
有123名19 - 23岁的大三和大四学生,他们每月在一个安全的在线数据库上完成一次酒精自评效应量表(SREA)、改良时间线追溯法(TFLB)、简短青少年酒精后果量表(BYAACS)和酒精效应问卷(AEQ),如其他地方所报道(达格等人,2013年)。对记忆测试前6个月的数据进行平均。在一次测试中,对参与者进行了迷你国际神经精神访谈 - 《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版 - 文本修订版(MINI - DSM - IV - TR)、PM测量(基于事件和基于时间的)以及回顾性记忆(RM)测量。根据对SREA、TLFB和AEQ连续6个月每月回复的平均得分,学生被分为不饮酒者、轻度饮酒者或重度饮酒者(如先前定义;达格等人,2013年)。用BYAACS测量酒精性失忆(昏厥)。
我们发现这些酒精使用分类与基于时间的PM之间存在关联,即被归类为重度饮酒者的参与者更有可能忘记执行基于时间的PM任务。我们还发现,在记忆测试前一个月自我报告的酒精性失忆(昏厥)与基于事件的PM任务的较低表现相关。参与者回忆RM任务的能力表明,即使PM项目未被执行也能成功编码,并且我们观察到酒精使用与RM表现之间没有关系。
大学生大量饮酒可能与PM受损有关。(PsycINFO数据库记录)