Wj. Lombardi et al., EFFECTS OF TRIAZOLAM AND ETHANOL ON PROACTIVE-INTERFERENCE - EVIDENCEFOR AN IMPAIRMENT IN RETRIEVAL INHIBITION, Neuropsychology, development, and cognition. Section A, Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology, 19(5), 1997, pp. 698-712
The effects of two memory-impairing drugs, ethanol and triazolam, on p
roactive interference (PI) in memory were studied. Following ingestion
of either one of these drugs or a placebo, subjects studied an A-B li
st ((e.g., BEE-WASP) of paired associates, followed by an A-C list (e.
g., BEE-HONEY) on the interference trial, and a D-E list (e.g., KING-Q
UEEN) followed by an A-C list on the control trial. A PI effect was fo
und in the data, such that subjects produced fewer correct second list
targets on the interference trial than on the control trial. Neither
ethanol nor triazolam was found to influence the size of the PI effect
. However, both drugs were found to increase B intrusions on the test
of the A-C list, to impair subjects' ability to produce more than one
studied response for each cue word, and to impair the subjective exper
ience of retrieved memory information. These data suggest that ethanol
and triazolam impair an inhibitory process that normally operates as
one component of intentional retrieval, playing an important role in t
he suppression of unwanted information during a memory task.