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Review
. 2025 Jul 15;17(7):107.
doi: 10.3390/neurolint17070107.

Cognitive Effects of Cannabis Use: A Comprehensive Review Across Domains

Affiliations
Review

Cognitive Effects of Cannabis Use: A Comprehensive Review Across Domains

Andréia Pucinelli de Souza Queiroz et al. Neurol Int. .

Abstract

Cannabis is the most widely consumed illicit substance worldwide, with rising use particularly among adolescents and young adults. Accumulating evidence indicates that chronic cannabis use may negatively impact several domains of cognition, yet findings across studies remain varied and fragmented. This comprehensive review synthesizes current knowledge on the long-term cognitive consequences of cannabis use, focusing on attention, executive functioning, learning, memory, language, motor coordination, and social cognition. Consistent impairments have been observed in domains such as attention, executive function, memory, and learning; however, most evidence derives from studies of acute or residual effects. Evidence of long-lasting deficits after extended abstinence remains more limited and methodologically heterogeneous. Acute motor coordination deficits are well established, but persistent impairments in this domain lack conclusive evidence. Effects on language remain inconclusive, and findings regarding social cognition, though limited, suggest potential deficits in emotion recognition and mental state inference. Early onset and high-frequency use are critical risk factors for more severe and enduring cognitive effects. Some deficits may partially reverse with abstinence, although many persist long after cessation. Overall, cannabis use is associated with widespread and lasting cognitive impairments. These findings underscore the need for targeted prevention strategies, especially among youth, and point to future longitudinal and mechanistic research to better understand the nature, persistence, and potential reversibility of these cognitive effects.

Keywords: abstinence duration; cannabis-related impairment; chronic exposure; neurocognitive functioning; residual effects.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflicts of interest. The funders had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analysis, or interpretation of the data; in the writing of the manuscript; or in the decision to publish the results.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Cannabis-related effects across cognitive domains, categorized by the level of evidence available. Each domain is marked to indicate whether the effects observed in the literature are predominantly acute, residual (i.e., short-term effects after recent use), or chronic (i.e., persistent effects after sustained abstinence).

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