Telling true from false: cannabis users show increased susceptibility to false memories
Molecular Psychiatry March 31, 2015 Jordi Riba, Marta Valle, Frederic Sampedro et al. 41 citations
Chronic cannabis users, even after a period of abstinence, are more prone to false memories—mistaking events that never occurred for real ones. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, the study found that abstinent cannabis users showed reduced brain activity in areas critical for memory processing, including the lateral and medial temporal lobe, as well as in parietal and frontal regions involved in attention and monitoring. Cannabis consumption was inversely correlated with medial temporal lobe activity, indicating a specific detriment to episodic memory. These results suggest long-lasting impairments in memory and cognitive control mechanisms that support reality monitoring.