Date: 3/02/2016 23:33:07
From: stumpy_seahorse
ID: 841540
Subject: Marijuana use and Verbal Memory

http://www.iflscience.com/brain/continuous-marijuana-use-may-harm-verbal-memory-study-shows

Continuous Marijuana Use May Harm Verbal Memory, Study Shows

February 2, 2016 | by Ben Taub
Marijuana use has been linked to worse verbal memory
Photo credit: Persistent cannabis smoking may affect a key aspect of cognitive function. Nick Starichenko/Shutterstock
336

Long-term marijuana smokers may suffer a decrease in their verbal memory by the time they are middle-aged, according to a new study. Appearing in JAMA Internal Medicine, the paper reveals how other elements of cognition, such as processing speed and executive function, do not appear to be affected by cannabis use.

The research was conducted by surveying participants of the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study, all of whom were aged 18 to 30 during the period between March 1985 and June 1986. Subjects were then interviewed about their marijuana use after 2, 5, 7, 10, 15, 20 and 25 years, before being asked to undertake a series of cognitive tests in August 2011.

Among these was the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test, which assesses verbal memory by asking participants to memorize lists of 15 words. The Digit Symbol Substitution Test, meanwhile, was employed in order assess attributes such as visual motor speed, working memory and sustained attention, all of which contribute to processing speed. Finally, the Stroop Interference Test was used to evaluate executive function, by asking participants to focus on and respond to a single stimulus while viewing a complex assortment of visual stimuli.

Of 3,385 subjects, the majority reported marijuana use at some point during their lives, although only 11.6 percent continued this into middle age. Initial analysis of the results appeared to show reduced performance on all three tests by everyone who had smoked marijuana, although this data was later adjusted to account for other factors, such as alcohol and cocaine use, age, and physical fitness.

Re-evaluating the data, the study authors noted an association between sustained marijuana use and a decrease in verbal memory. For every 1,825 days (5 years) of cannabis smoking, participants were found to have a 1 in 2 chance of being able to remember one word fewer from the list of 15 words. However, no correlation was discovered between marijuana use and processing speed or executive function.

Although the study authors are unable at this stage to explain how marijuana smoking brings about these alterations, they point to other studies that have associated exposure to tetrahydrocannabinol – the plant’s psychoactive ingredient – with functional changes in the hippocampus, the brain’s learning and memory hub. However, with observational studies such as this, it is virtually impossible to discern cause from effect.

The researchers also acknowledge that their study has numerous limitations, such as the fact that self-reported drug use is not always reliable. Regardless, they insist that this information should be taken into account by policymakers and public health officials when deciding how to educate the public on the potential dangers of smoking marijuana.

Reply Quote

Date: 3/02/2016 23:35:43
From: roughbarked
ID: 841541
Subject: re: Marijuana use and Verbal Memory

stumpy_seahorse said:


http://www.iflscience.com/brain/continuous-marijuana-use-may-harm-verbal-memory-study-shows

Continuous Marijuana Use May Harm Verbal Memory, Study Shows

February 2, 2016 | by Ben Taub
Marijuana use has been linked to worse verbal memory
Photo credit: Persistent cannabis smoking may affect a key aspect of cognitive function. Nick Starichenko/Shutterstock
336

Long-term marijuana smokers may suffer a decrease in their verbal memory by the time they are middle-aged, according to a new study. Appearing in JAMA Internal Medicine, the paper reveals how other elements of cognition, such as processing speed and executive function, do not appear to be affected by cannabis use.

The research was conducted by surveying participants of the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study, all of whom were aged 18 to 30 during the period between March 1985 and June 1986. Subjects were then interviewed about their marijuana use after 2, 5, 7, 10, 15, 20 and 25 years, before being asked to undertake a series of cognitive tests in August 2011.

Among these was the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test, which assesses verbal memory by asking participants to memorize lists of 15 words. The Digit Symbol Substitution Test, meanwhile, was employed in order assess attributes such as visual motor speed, working memory and sustained attention, all of which contribute to processing speed. Finally, the Stroop Interference Test was used to evaluate executive function, by asking participants to focus on and respond to a single stimulus while viewing a complex assortment of visual stimuli.

Of 3,385 subjects, the majority reported marijuana use at some point during their lives, although only 11.6 percent continued this into middle age. Initial analysis of the results appeared to show reduced performance on all three tests by everyone who had smoked marijuana, although this data was later adjusted to account for other factors, such as alcohol and cocaine use, age, and physical fitness.

Re-evaluating the data, the study authors noted an association between sustained marijuana use and a decrease in verbal memory. For every 1,825 days (5 years) of cannabis smoking, participants were found to have a 1 in 2 chance of being able to remember one word fewer from the list of 15 words. However, no correlation was discovered between marijuana use and processing speed or executive function.

Although the study authors are unable at this stage to explain how marijuana smoking brings about these alterations, they point to other studies that have associated exposure to tetrahydrocannabinol – the plant’s psychoactive ingredient – with functional changes in the hippocampus, the brain’s learning and memory hub. However, with observational studies such as this, it is virtually impossible to discern cause from effect.

The researchers also acknowledge that their study has numerous limitations, such as the fact that self-reported drug use is not always reliable. Regardless, they insist that this information should be taken into account by policymakers and public health officials when deciding how to educate the public on the potential dangers of smoking marijuana.

FFS. No one was ever rendered speechless by some really good quality weed?

Reply Quote

Date: 3/02/2016 23:37:55
From: stumpy_seahorse
ID: 841542
Subject: re: Marijuana use and Verbal Memory

roughbarked said:

FFS. No one was ever rendered speechless by some really good quality weed?

tell those doing the research…

Reply Quote

Date: 3/02/2016 23:38:53
From: JudgeMental
ID: 841543
Subject: re: Marijuana use and Verbal Memory

though the research isn’t about that at all.

Reply Quote

Date: 3/02/2016 23:39:36
From: roughbarked
ID: 841544
Subject: re: Marijuana use and Verbal Memory

stumpy_seahorse said:


roughbarked said:

FFS. No one was ever rendered speechless by some really good quality weed?

tell those doing the research…

They are only proving what is known.

Reply Quote

Date: 3/02/2016 23:39:53
From: roughbarked
ID: 841545
Subject: re: Marijuana use and Verbal Memory

JudgeMental said:


though the research isn’t about that at all.

That is true.

Reply Quote

Date: 3/02/2016 23:41:41
From: JudgeMental
ID: 841546
Subject: re: Marijuana use and Verbal Memory

A) science doesn’t “prove” anything, plus that sounds like another “look at stupid science” post.
B) so what was your comment referring to then?

Reply Quote

Date: 3/02/2016 23:47:05
From: roughbarked
ID: 841548
Subject: re: Marijuana use and Verbal Memory

JudgeMental said:


A) science doesn’t “prove” anything, plus that sounds like another “look at stupid science” post.
B) so what was your comment referring to then?

Are you pointing that to me?

Reply Quote

Date: 3/02/2016 23:52:13
From: roughbarked
ID: 841550
Subject: re: Marijuana use and Verbal Memory

roughbarked said:


JudgeMental said:

A) science doesn’t “prove” anything, plus that sounds like another “look at stupid science” post.
B) so what was your comment referring to then?

Are you pointing that to me?

If you were, then you are barking up a tree I wouldn’t approach roughly.

Reply Quote

Date: 3/02/2016 23:56:21
From: roughbarked
ID: 841551
Subject: re: Marijuana use and Verbal Memory

roughbarked said:


roughbarked said:

JudgeMental said:

A) science doesn’t “prove” anything, plus that sounds like another “look at stupid science” post.
B) so what was your comment referring to then?

Are you pointing that to me?

If you were, then you are barking up a tree I wouldn’t approach roughly.

B) so what was your comment referring to then?

Research is what is paid to be done, on the one hand.
It happens everywhere in life otherwise.

Reply Quote

Date: 12/02/2016 18:27:55
From: stumpy_seahorse
ID: 845674
Subject: re: Marijuana use and Verbal Memory

here..

party_pants said:


CrazyNeutrino said:

I don’t feel emotions with understanding what prisons and detention centres are

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prison

A prison, correctional facility, penitentiary, gaol (Ireland, UK, Australia), or jail is a facility in which inmates are forcibly confined and denied a variety of freedoms under the authority of the state as a form of punishment.

Detention centres are where people are forcibly confined and are denied a variety of freedoms.

They look both the same to me.

We get the point you are trying to make; just that you are using the wrong English words to describe it.

The words you are using already have a commonly understood meaning which is different to the meaning you are trying get get across.

Reply Quote

Date: 12/02/2016 18:50:52
From: CrazyNeutrino
ID: 845677
Subject: re: Marijuana use and Verbal Memory

A prison is a facility in which inmates are forcibly confined and denied a variety of freedoms

A detention centre is a facility in which inmates are forcibly confined and denied a variety of freedoms

Two words, same meaning, same observation.

What’s cannabis got to do with it? Nothing!

Reply Quote

Date: 12/02/2016 19:07:48
From: roughbarked
ID: 845683
Subject: re: Marijuana use and Verbal Memory

CrazyNeutrino said:


A prison is a facility in which inmates are forcibly confined and denied a variety of freedoms

A detention centre is a facility in which inmates are forcibly confined and denied a variety of freedoms

Two words, same meaning, same observation.

What’s cannabis got to do with it? Nothing!

People have been detained in huge numbers, particularly in the USA. Locked away in prisons for innumerable years of detention for being in posession of cannabis.

Reply Quote

Date: 12/02/2016 19:14:51
From: CrazyNeutrino
ID: 845684
Subject: re: Marijuana use and Verbal Memory

roughbarked said:


CrazyNeutrino said:

A prison is a facility in which inmates are forcibly confined and denied a variety of freedoms

A detention centre is a facility in which inmates are forcibly confined and denied a variety of freedoms

Two words, same meaning, same observation.

What’s cannabis got to do with it? Nothing!

People have been detained in huge numbers, particularly in the USA. Locked away in prisons for innumerable years of detention for being in posession of cannabis.

You’re right.

Reply Quote

Date: 12/02/2016 19:17:41
From: CrazyNeutrino
ID: 845685
Subject: re: Marijuana use and Verbal Memory

Two former pot smokers.

Reply Quote

Date: 12/02/2016 19:21:07
From: roughbarked
ID: 845686
Subject: re: Marijuana use and Verbal Memory

not sure they actually inhaled.

Reply Quote

Date: 12/02/2016 19:23:44
From: CrazyNeutrino
ID: 845687
Subject: re: Marijuana use and Verbal Memory

roughbarked said:


not sure they actually inhaled.

maybe they couldn’t remember.

Reply Quote

Date: 12/02/2016 19:27:25
From: roughbarked
ID: 845689
Subject: re: Marijuana use and Verbal Memory

CrazyNeutrino said:


roughbarked said:

not sure they actually inhaled.

maybe they couldn’t remember.

They remembered the word.

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