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Alcohol-Induced Retrograde Facilitation?: Mixed Evidence in a Preregistered Replication and Encoding-Maintenance-Retrieval Analysis
Somewhat counterintuitively, alcohol consumption following learning of new information has been shown to enhance performance on a delayed subsequent memory test. This phenomenon has become known as the retrograde facilitation effect (Parker et al., 1981). Although conceptually replicated repeatedly,...
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Published in: | Experimental psychology 2022-11, Vol.69 (6), p.335-350 |
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Main Authors: | , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Somewhat counterintuitively, alcohol consumption following
learning of new information has been shown to enhance performance on a delayed
subsequent memory test. This phenomenon has become known as the retrograde
facilitation effect (Parker et al.,
1981). Although conceptually replicated repeatedly, serious
methodological problems are associated with most previous demonstrations of
retrograde facilitation. Moreover, two potential explanations have been
proposed, the interference and the consolidation hypothesis. So far, empirical
evidence for and against both hypotheses is inconclusive (Wixted, 2004). To scrutinize the existence of
the effect, we conducted a pre-registered replication that avoided common
methodological pitfalls. In addition, we used Küpper-Tetzel and Erdfelder's (2012)
multinomial processing tree (MPT) model to disentangle encoding, maintenance,
and retrieval contributions to memory performance. With a total sample size of
N = 93, we found no evidence for retrograde
facilitation in overall cued or free recall of previously presented word pairs.
In line with this, MPT analyses also showed no reliable difference in
maintenance probabilities. However, MPT analyses revealed a robust alcohol
advantage in retrieval. We conclude that alcohol-induced retrograde facilitation
might exist and be driven by an underlying retrieval benefit. Future research is
needed to investigate potential moderators and mediators of the effect
explicitly. |
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ISSN: | 1618-3169 2190-5142 |
DOI: | 10.1027/1618-3169/a000569 |