Scopolamine impairs memory performance and reduces frontal but not parietal
visual P3 amplitude.
Author(s): Potter DD, Pickles CD, Roberts RC, Rugg MD.
Affiliation(s): School of Psychology, University of St Andrews, St. Andrews, UK.
d.d.potter@dundee.ac.uk
Publication date & source: 2000, Biol Psychol. , 52(1):37-52
It has been suggested that the P3 event-related potential (ERP) may mark the
operation of certain working or long-term memory processes. It has also been
reported that cholinergic blockade by scopolamine induces significant memory
impairment and is associated with an increased latency, as well as amplitude
reduction or abolition of the auditory P3, thus supporting hypothesised links
between P3 and long-term memory function. An intriguing anomaly is that, while
visual P3 latency is also increased by scopolamine, amplitude is not changed. The
aim of this study was to make a more detailed assessment of the effects of
scopolamine on the visual P3 at a drug dose known to induce memory impairment.
After drug administration, memory performance was significantly impaired and
visual P3 latency was significantly increased. There was little evidence of
parietal P3 amplitude reduction, but frontal P3 amplitude was significantly
reduced in both target and non-target conditions. These findings, when considered
in the light of a more recent study of the effects of scopolamine on auditory P3,
suggest that cholinergic blockade produces a common effect in both visual and
auditory modalities of significant frontal P3 amplitude reduction, but no
significant parietal P3 amplitude reduction. These results are consistent with
the view that there are modality-independent generators of the parietal and
frontal P3. The finding of drug-induced memory impairment and modulations of
frontal ERP deflections is also consistent with recent evidence of a significant
role for regions of the frontal lobe in encoding and retrieval of long-term
memories.
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