Publication | Closed Access
Human Serial Learning: Enhancement with Arecholine and Choline Impairment with Scopolamine
526
Citations
20
References
1978
Year
NeuropsychologyBrain FunctionDevelopmental Cognitive NeurosciencePharmacotherapySocial SciencesCholine ImpairmentCholinergic AgonistNeurologyHuman Serial LearningCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive SciencePlacebo InjectionsPsychoactive DrugBehavioral PharmacologyNeuropharmacologyDopaminePharmacologyAddictionProcedural MemoryHuman NeuroscienceNeuroscienceMedicineCholinergic Antagonist
Arecholine (4 milligrams), a cholinergic agonist, and choline (10 grams), a precursor of acetylcholine, significantly enhanced serial learning in normal human subjects. The subjects received methscopolamine prior to both arecholine and placebo injections. Conversely, scopolamine (0.5 milligram), a cholinergic antagonist, impaired learning and this impairment was reversed by arecholine and choline and the impairment after scopolamine were inversely proportional to the subject's performance on placebo; that is, "poor" performers were more vulnerable to both the enhancing effect of cholinergic agonist and precursor and the impairment after cholinergic antagonist than "good" performers.
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