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RECENT PUBLICATIONS
Gevins, A., Smith, M.E., & McEvoy, L.K
(2002). Tracking the cognitive pharmacodynamics of psychoactive
substances with combinations of behavioral and neurophysiological
measures. Neuropsychopharmacology, 26, 27-39.
ABSTRACT
Many common pharmacological treatments have
effects on cognitive ability. Psychometric task batteries used to
characterize such effects do not provide direct information about
treatment-related changes in brain function. Since overt task performance
reflects motivation and effort as well as ability, behavioral measures
alone may over- or under-estimate the impact of a pharmacological
intervention on brain function. Here we present a method that combines
behavioral and neurophysiological measures in an attempt to detect
the psychoactive effects of pharmacological treatments with greater
sensitivity than that provided by behavioral measures alone. Initial
application of the method is made to the data from a double blind,
placebo-controlled, crossover study in which caffeine, diphenhydramine,
and alcohol were used to alter the mental state of 16 healthy subjects
at rest and while they performed low load and high load versions
of a working memory task. For each intervention more sensitive detection
of drug or alcohol effects over a four-hour period was obtained
when EEG variables were included in multivariate analyses than when
only behavioral variables were used. These initial results suggest
that it can be useful to incorporate neurophysiological measures
of brain activity into inferences concerning the acute impact of
drugs on mental function, and demonstrate the feasibility of using
multivariate combinations of behavioral and neurophysiological measures
to sensitively characterize the pharmacodynamics of drug-induced
changes in cognition.
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