Cannabis increases susceptibility to false memory
Lilian Kloft, Henry Otgaar, Arjan Blokland, Lauren A. Monds, Stefan W. Toennes, Elizabeth F. Loftus, Johannes G. Ramaekers
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences February 10, 2020 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1920162117 via OpenAlex
Summary
Under the acute influence of THC, healthy volunteers showed a heightened tendency to form false memories compared to those given a placebo. In a double-blind, randomized trial, 64 participants completed memory tasks—including associative word lists and two virtual-reality misinformation scenarios—immediately while intoxicated and again one week later while sober. Intoxicated individuals exhibited a stronger false-recognition bias, especially when test items were weakly associated with studied material, and were more susceptible to misinformation in eyewitness and perpetrator scenarios. These false-memory effects were largely confined to the acute intoxication phase. The findings suggest that cannabis increases false-memory proneness and have practical implications for police interviews with suspects and eyewitnesses.
Study at a glance
| Characteristics | Randomized controlled trial Placebo-controlled Double-blind Peer reviewed |
|---|---|
| Sample size | 64 |
| Population | Healthy volunteers |
| Intervention | Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) |
| Duration | Immediate test and 1-week delayed test |
| Topics | Cannabis |
| Keywords | False memory Misinformation Eyewitness memory Task project management |
| Citations | 49 |
| Key finding | Acute THC intoxication increased false-memory effects across associative word-list and virtual-reality misinformation tasks, with effects mostly limited to the intoxication phase. |
Abstract
With the growing global acceptance of cannabis and its widespread use by eyewitnesses and suspects in legal cases, understanding the popular drug's ramifications for memory is a pressing need. In a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial, we examined the acute and delayed effects of Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) intoxication on susceptibility to false memory in 64 healthy volunteers. Memory was tested immediately (encoding and retrieval under drug influence) and 1 wk later (retrieval sober). We used three different methods (associative word lists and two misinformation tasks using virtual reality). Across all methods, we found evidence for enhanced false-memory effects in intoxicated participants. Specifically, intoxicated participants showed higher false recognition in the associative word-list task both at immediate and delayed test than controls. This yes bias became increasingly strong with decreasing levels of association between studied and test items. In a misinformation task, intoxicated participants were more susceptible to false-memory creation using a virtual-reality eyewitness scenario and virtual-reality perpetrator scenario. False-memory effects were mostly restricted to the acute-intoxication phase. Cannabis seems to increase false-memory proneness, with decreasing strength of association between an event and a test item, as assessed by different false-memory paradigms. Our findings have implications for how and when the police should interview suspects and eyewitnesses.