Cannabis increases susceptibility to false memory
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences February 10, 2020 Lilian Kloft, Henry Otgaar, Arjan Blokland et al. 49 citations
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.