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David A Gallo

Department of Psychology, University of Chicago.

2 papers in the library · 54 citations · publishing 2023-2024

Papers

The acute effects of psychoactive drugs on emotional episodic memory encoding, consolidation, and retrieval: A comprehensive review.

Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews July 1, 2023 Manoj K Doss, Harriet de Wit, David A Gallo 30 citations

Psychoactive drugs affect emotional episodic memory at three stages: encoding, consolidation, and retrieval. Drugs given before encoding can impair (e.g., alcohol, benzodiazepines, THC, ketamine), enhance (e.g., dextroamphetamine), or both impair and enhance (e.g., MDMA) emotional memories compared to neutral ones. Sedatives given after encoding can preferentially boost emotional memories during consolidation, but this selectivity may weaken or reverse over time. Retrieving memories under THC, dextroamphetamine, MDMA, or sedatives can distort memory, especially for positive emotional content. The review proposes neural mechanisms and discusses how these effects might influence drug use and abuse.

Unique effects of sedatives, dissociatives, psychedelics, stimulants, and cannabinoids on episodic memory: A review and reanalysis of acute drug effects on recollection, familiarity, and metamemory.

Psychological review March 1, 2024 Manoj K Doss, Jason Samaha, Frederick S Barrett et al. 24 citations

Psychoactive drugs produce unique subjective states, but their effects on episodic memory often overlap. This reanalysis of 10 data sets (28 drug conditions) used signal detection models to separate three memory processes: recollection (retrieving specific details), familiarity (recognizing without details), and metamemory (introspecting about memory accuracy). Sedatives impaired both recollection and familiarity during encoding but enhanced recollection during consolidation. Dissociatives and cannabinoids impaired recollection during encoding, and cannabinoids increased false recollections during retrieval. Psychedelics impaired recollection during encoding but tended to enhance familiarity. Stimulants enhanced metamemory during encoding and retrieval but impaired metamemory during consolidation. These distinct patterns help explain drug-specific phenomena like sedative-induced blackouts and psychedelic presque vu, and suggest that memory quantity and stability influence metamemory.