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RECENT PRESENTATIONS
McEvoy, L.K., Chellaramani, R., Smith, M.E.
& Gevins, A. (2001) Effect of a Benzodiazepine on Behavioral
and Neurophysiological Measures of Working Memory. Annual Meeting
of Society for Neuroscience Conference. November, San Diego.
ABSTRACT
Benzodiazepines are thought to act primarily
on GABA receptors, enhancing the inhibitory effects of this neurotransmitter.
Such enhancement could disrupt the ability to sustain activation
of task-relevant representations and interfere with working memory
(WM). Ten healthy adults received a benzodiazepine (1mg alprazolam)
or placebo in a within-subject double-blind fashion. EEGs were collected
during 2 difficulty levels of an "n-back" spatial WM task
and under resting conditions. Alprazolam impaired WM task performance
and produced marked subjective sedation. These effects peaked within
1 hour of drug ingestion and resolved within 3 hours. Alprazolam
also affected resting and task-related EEG measures. Under placebo
conditions, increased task difficulty was associated with an increase
in power of the frontal midline theta EEG rhythm (a signal from
medial frontal areas associated with effortful attention), and a
widespread decrease in power in the alpha band (a neocortical signal
inversely proportional to the number of neurons involved in task
processing). The acute effects of alprazolam eliminated these task-related
changes. Alprazolam also produced long-lasting (5 hours) changes
in the resting EEG and in attention-related components of the stimulus-locked
ERP. The results suggest that, in conjunction with their sedating
effect, benzodiazepines impair performance on WM tasks while changing
the oscillatory properties of cortical neurons and disrupting their
responsiveness to variations in WM task demands. They also show
that EEG measures provide important information on the time-course
of pharmacological effects that are not apparent in behavioral or
subjective measures. Supported by the NIMH.
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