Effects of benzodiazepines on acquisition and performance: a critical assessment
- PMID: 2877426
- DOI: 10.1016/0149-7634(86)90013-8
Effects of benzodiazepines on acquisition and performance: a critical assessment
Abstract
Evidence related to the effects of benzodiazepines on learning and memory is reviewed in the contexts of human verbal learning studies and animal studies using both aversive and non-aversive paradigms. While the impairment of acquisition by benzodiazepines appears to be a robust phenomenon generalizing across species and experimental conditions, the impairment in the performance of an already-learned task by such drugs appears to be more restrictive and highly dependent upon experimental contingencies. Thus far, performance impairment appears to be found mainly in animal studies using non-aversive, food-motivated tasks, with such tasks being particularly well suited for investigating such a phenomenon. At present, there is a noticeable lack of knowledge regarding the neurochemical substrates underlying BDZ-induced impairment. Finally, some issues that may contribute to the presence or absence of a BDZ-induced performance impairment in published studies are briefly considered.
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