Drugs increase false memories


By David Joel Miller, MS, Licensed Therapist & Licensed Counselor.

Memory pieces.
Photo courtesy of Pixabay.com

They may not be lying;

They remember things that never happened.

Drugs suppress true memories but also increase false memories. We have heard a lot about false memories over the last few years. Most of it around questioning techniques that suggested to children they had been abused. As a result, they began to believe these things had happened and then thought they remembered things that turned out to be false memories.

Recent research suggests that drugs and alcohol, as well as certain emotional states, may increase the risk that what people in recovery are remembering did not actually happen despite their memories.

People with certain mental or emotional problems are at increased risk to have false memories even if they never abused substances. Something about the chemistry of the brain regulates not only true memories but also creates false memories. We can get ourselves into trouble when we start believing memories that never happened.

There is a common belief in recovery circles that substance abusers have told stories, lies, so often they begin to believe their own dishonesties. I have seen enough examples of this phenomenon to believe it does happen. But the creation of false memories goes beyond simple lies and the person who told that lie beginning to believe the falsehood.

One group of researchers conducted a study using two commonly used and abused substances and came up with some surprising results (Ballard et al 2012) surprising to me anyway.

The test they used, called the DRM, gives people a list of words, such as bed, rest, awake, tired, dream. What is missing from the list is a word that would be commonly associated with the word list but which was never shown to the research participants. In this case, the word they are looking for was “sleep.”

If you remember the list correctly or are very observant you know that sleep was not on the list. The trick here is to see how many people will swear that the missing word, in this case, sleep, was shown to them. Using a procedure like this the researcher can see if a specific drug or emotional condition will increase the risk of a false memory. In this experiment, they wanted to see how many people would say that the word sleep was shown to them when it had not been a part of the experience.

This simple experiment may not make much difference. Does it matter if I think sleep was on the list of words I read? But if a drug or emotion increases my errors on this test it suggests that I may remember other things that did not happen. Did I remember someone being at the party that was never there? Do you remember being touched inappropriately when what really happened was a handshake or a pat on the back? Those things matter.

Some drugs reduce your ability to remember things that did happen. Alcohol is at the head of the list. Benzodiazepines also impair memory. Some drugs have been called date rape drugs and banned or tightly controlled for the same reason. The big question has been what effect do these drugs have on the creation of false memories? Ballard and group looked at that question.

It would be easy to conclude that depressant drugs like Alcohol and benzodiazepines would reduce memory and therefore give room for more false memories to fill in the gap. There is a related concept called “Confabulation” in which alcoholics brains fill in the gaps in memory that are the result of not having stored memories in the first place. Confabulation plus blackouts leave the memory of Alcoholics suspect.

We would expect that stimulants like caffeine and amphetamines would increase true memories and reduce the chance of false memories. That is not what happens. In Ballard’s study Amphetamines, of the type prescribed for ADHD, increased true memories but also increased false memories. An earlier study by Capek and Guenther (2009) cited by Ballard found the same effects for Caffeine.

It would appear that depressants reduce true memories and allow for false memories and stimulants increase memory formation of both true and false memories.

So what about “All Arounder’s.” (See Inaba & Cohen book Uppers, Downers, and All Arounder’s, 2004.)  Ballard and friends also looked at the effects of Marijuana on memory. While I try to stay out of the whole medical marijuana debate some of you may remember my previous post on the effects of Marijuana on memory. That post was about the effects on storage and retrieval of true memories, what about marijuana’s effect on false memories?

The drug used in Ballard’s study was THC, the most studied active ingredient in Marijuana, given in pill form. While this is not exactly the same as smoking Marijuana it is likely to be very similar and much more specific that studies using drugs of unknown potency. There are other chemicals in smoked Marijuana and the research on those other compounds is very lacking.

They found that Amphetamines had a larger effect in creating false memories than THC and while THC may affect both memory storage and memory retrieval, this study at least did not find a significant increase in false memories for THC users.

There are lots of problems with taking studies done in the lab and translating them to the experiences of people who take drugs in their daily life.

It is worth noting that there was significant individual variation in the effects of both drugs on true and false memory. So the conclusions are for all the people in the study as a group and individual results did vary. This raises questions about what individual differences account for these variations.

In Ballard’s study, as in so many other studies, people with diagnosed mental illnesses or those with a current substance abuse problem are not included in the study. Those are exactly the people for whom the effects of drugs and mood states on false memory may be the most critical.

There are some studies of people with various mental health diagnoses examining the effects of having an emotional issue and the creation of false memories. In a future post, I want to talk about the effects of Depression, Anxiety, and OCD on true and false memories.

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9 thoughts on “Drugs increase false memories

  1. Pingback: Every day is April Fools’ Day when you are fooling yourself | counselorssoapbox

  2. Hi – came across your very informative blog while searching for information around false memories. My brother is currently undergoing a detox program and counselling for a long term addiction to marijuana and the synthetic cannabis. My concern is his counselling sessions he has uncovered several false memories around his schooling, which may have happened albeit on a far lesser scale than what he has been describing. One ‘memory’ however is very concerning – he was apparently with my mother aged 9, and saw a severely injured baby on the road who had been hit by a car. In his story he says he tried CPR until the paramedics arrived. He has recounted the story to use numerous times but my mother, nor father has any recollection of this and he has become angry they have not remembered and justified himself by saying the incident was so traumatic they must have blocked it out. I wondered if you might have some useful articles (in laymans’ terms) that might describe the phenomenon and what we should do about it. Would it be unreasonable for instance, to contact the therapist and voice our concerns?

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    • If he “remembers” this there is probably nothing anyone can do to convince him that what he “remembers” did not happen. Since this is in the past there is nothing that could be done about it now even if it had happened. As he moves along in recovery he may discover that his memories are inaccurate.He may have seen this on T.V. or even imagined it. The therapist will not be able to talk with you unless your brother has signed a release and even there most of the session would be confidential. The therapist could receive information from you as in listen to what you say without telling you anything. Can’t think of any specific article right now . While those articles may help you understand what he is experiencing they will not be likely to get him to decide that what he experienced was unreal. My suggestion is give him time and as he recovers things may change.

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  3. Pingback: Do you have a drinking problem? | counselorssoapbox

  4. Hello,
    Thanks for the interesting post
    I have a request: I can’t find the article you mentioned in this post (Ballard etal 2012), could you please help me? I need the name of the article or the publication or any address of this article.
    Thanks

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    • That was from:Psychoactive drugs and false memory: comparison of dextroamphetamine and delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol on false recognition, Michael E. Ballard & David A. Gallo & Harriet de Wit
      Psychopharmacology (2012) 219:15–24 DOI 10.1007/s00213-011-2374-5
      Received: 13 April 2011 /Accepted: 24 May 2011 /Published online: 7 June 2011
      This was one of 23 article I reviewed for the series of posts on Memory.
      Let me know if you need sources for anything else.
      Thanks for the comment on my post.

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  5. Pingback: Why your partner thinks you said things you know you didn’t say | counselorssoapbox

  6. Pingback: Every day is April Fools’ Day when you are fooling yourself | counselorssoapbox

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