Experiment Shows Caffeine Boosts Long Term Memory 123
An anonymous reader writes "A team of researchers at Johns Hopkins has published results demonstrating that caffeine seems to boost long-term memory. In a double-blind study, participants were shown a series of images soon after taking either a caffeine pill or a placebo; 24 hours later they were tested on a similar, but not identical, series of images. Those who took the caffeine pill were more likely to correctly classify images as being different, identical, or similar to those seen the previous day; researchers refer to this as a 'pattern separation' test. The beneficial effect of caffeine on the long-term memory of honey bees was covered by Slashdot earlier."
do be a do bee (Score:2)
The Secret (Score:5, Funny)
so *that's* the secret.
Yup, that's the secret. Feed coffee to your computer and you won't need backups any more.
Re:do be a do bee (Score:5, Funny)
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This suffers from the usual "caffeine" bias in that it only works if you're not a regular coffee drinker.
Coffee/caffeine does nothing if you're a regular drinker
(except bring you back up to what the rest of the world considers "normal" - caffeine withdrawal is another subject).
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back up to what the rest of the world considers "normal"
"Caffeine is the most widely used psychoactive substance in the world. In Western society, at least 80 per cent of the adult population consumes caffeine in amounts large enough to have an effect on the brain." -abstract [nih.gov] Caffeine consumption is normal.
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That's a popular little trivia fact that unfortunately isn't supported by the evidence. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0278691502000960 [sciencedirect.com]
interesting . sponsored by Folger's? (Score:2)
That's interesting. I do wonder about ONE study that contradicts widely held knowledge.
Real article behind paywall (Score:2)
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Re:Real article behind paywall (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Real article behind paywall (Score:5, Informative)
So the article costs $32 to read. It begs the question, what are they hiding?
Most likely nothing. Yes, they could have submitted it to an open-access journal, but when you've a shot at getting something into Nature Neuroscience then most authors will go for it because, bottom line and right or wrong, it's what Universities and Institutions often look at when deciding who to hire and who to fire.
Besides, if you wanted to hide something why would you hide it behind a paywall which a large proprotion of research insititutes probably have access to? You're basically advertising your secrets to anyone who is knowledgeable in the field and has a research job.
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They're not hiding anything. They're paying for professional editors, typesetters, etc. in order to improve the quality and fix errors. The article published in Nature (and many other high ranking journals) is significantly improved from the one the authors originally submitted.
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This is simply false. Apparently you've never published in a top Journal before. Please stop spreading your misinformation. Every paper in top journals goes through significant editing by the publishing staff. Just because you've never met these people doesn't mean we don't exist. Stop trying to marginalize people.
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Believe me, I appreciate the efforts of professional editors, and I wish they weren't suffering such collateral damage from disintermediation. I greatly prefer reading professionally-edited material instead of the stuff 90% of scientists (and everyone else) write when left to their own devices.
However, I don't think that it raises the scientific value of journal articles enough to justify today's pricing trends -- and, more to the point, the information-blocking publishers do in an attempt to enforce those
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So the article costs $32 to read. It begs the question, what are they hiding?
They're not hiding anything. They're just hoping non-coffee-drinkers forget they read the article, and purchase it several times over.
"I WILL have a third cup!" (Score:5, Interesting)
Like the health benefits of a couple of alcoholic drinks, there will undoubtedly follow a recommended modest dose, beyond which the diminishing returns corollary overtakes any health benefits.
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Certainly; with a high enough dose, the subject would die.
That aside, the finding is interesting. Based on the summary, I thought that it might just be helping the subjects get closer to the ideal level of psychological arousal for what is probably a simple, routine, and possibly slightly boring task. However, the article states that the subjects were given the pills after having been shown the images, not before, in order to control for that possibility.
There is still one alternative explanation that I can
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"That's funny: rmdingler never has a third cup of coffee at home."
Re:"I WILL have a third cup!" (Score:4, Funny)
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Perhaps you remembered because they spoofed the commercial in the (epic) movie "Airplane!"
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If there are significant negative effects of drinking coffee then I'd have thought we'd have found out about it by now.
Look at the current study: here's a positive effect of drinking coffee that we didn't know about. What makes negative effects more obvious than positive effects? Negative effects can be subtle and hard to detect, especially given how noisy data from humans is, and especially when talking about long-term effects.
Look at how long it took for us to realize that tobacco was bad for you overall. People had been smoking that for centuries, yet it's only been in the last few decades that the link to cancer
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Negative effects tend to be more noticeable than positive effects as they take effect quicker. If people are dying 10 years before they should be, you're going to sp
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Coffeine (Score:5, Funny)
As a heavy caffeine user, I confirm that... hmm... erm... what was I saying?
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As a heavy caffeine user, I confirm that... hmm... erm... what was I saying?
Also, is the memory improvement from coffee powerful enough to overcome the damage done by all the weed I smoke?
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Come back tomorrow and you'll remember!
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When?
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I don't think your message will be endorsed by the ASEV (American Society for Enology and Viticulture).
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What an enlightened comment.
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you should not introduce into your body anything that ends in "ine"
I guess that depends:
- guillotine <~~ bad
- gasoline <~~ bad
- Listerine <~~ Oh, sorry
- Dateline <~~ bad
- Trampoline <~~ Fun!
For more 'ends in "ine"' options just look here [scrabblefinder.com]
Re:Coffeine (Score:4, Informative)
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Thanks. I was about to swallow a landmine.
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vaccine
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our hardwired religious abuse fairytail history & heritage will have to do?
Ever notice the similarities between evangelical Christians and evangelical athiests? Neither drawer's knives are very sharp (and as Pratchett says, they may even be spoons).
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(Or, alternatively, what does athiest mean?)
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"Evangelical" as in "evangelize" as in "everybody should know that I'm an atheist and therefore better than you."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Zx7PNhl1Sg [youtube.com]
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I guess I'm just suspicious why the words evangelize and evangelical would be so similar if they didn't refer to the same root word. Another win for our English language I suppose :P
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Well the goal of preaching is to convert people, yeah? I don't see why that has to be limited to any particular religion, or lack thereof. Convincing someone to be an atheist is just using different arguments, but it's still seeking to bring them around to your point of view. Or does 'preach' imply some amount of fervor? Because plenty of atheists have that as well.
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http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/atheists.png
"Personally, I find atheists just as annoying as fundamentalist christians."
"Well, the important thing is that you've found a way to feel superior to both."
24 hours is long term? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:24 hours is long term? (Score:4, Informative)
Yes, the long-term memory system is used for everything older than a few minutes. They're different functional units of the brain. Maybe if you had a longer attention span you could've looked up what "long-term memory" means and figured that out for yourself? Maybe learned something?
Re:24 hours is long term? (Score:5, Funny)
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I misread the tone of your post, I assumed it was one of those "I can't believe that 24 hours is considered a long time in today's society" remarks and not a joke.
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I don't understand this joke.
Raktajino (Score:3, Funny)
Raktajino helps me remember Trek trivia.
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Pfft, raktajino is a p'tahk drink. Prune Juice! Now *that's* the drink of a warrior.
The detrimental effects for sleep thwart it for me (Score:2)
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Considering the demographics on slashdot, I'm going to take a shot in the dark: caffeine and other stimulants have been noted to have uncommon side-effects in ADHD diagnosed population. Could that be you?
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Seeing as how I was diagnosed with ADHD as a kid, I can certainly say that Caffeine and many other stimulants tend to work bass-ackwards on me by putting me to sleep.
For those interested, look up how/what Ritalin is and what it was approved for, which isn't ADHD
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I assume that means that you've cut out caffeine from other sources as well? (Soft drinks, teas, various foods.)
I know someone that can't drink a Coke after 4-5:00 PM or he has trouble getting to sleep.
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I assume that means that you've cut out caffeine from other sources as well? (Soft drinks, teas, various foods.)
Sure.
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Sleep? Nah. But caffeine is also one of the leading causes of diarrhea. So I'm off the stuff. Too bad, a cup of coffee or tea was a nice way to start the day.
Scientific Proof (Score:1, Funny)
We are the biped evolution of bees. It's a fact now
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We are the biped evolution of bees. It's a fact now
Buzz off with your crazy theories!
just don't drink too much (Score:2)
i've found that if i drink the supersize starbucks coffees its the opposite effect. the small size coffees are just right
Memorizing vs Recollection (Score:5, Interesting)
The experiment used caffeine during memorization. Does caffeine have any relative effect on recollection?
Re:Memorizing vs Recollection (Score:4, Informative)
No, it does not help recollection. It helps to form and store the information.
ie, drink cafeine when you study to store the information. Drinking caffeine during the test won't increase recollection though it will help focus.
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Forgot the link:
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn24855-drink-two-espressos-to-enhance-longterm-memory.html [newscientist.com]
Not surprised (Score:2)
To me caffeine feels like the brain running on overclock, sure it's faster and better at almost anything but afterwards you're dog tired and overall you get less done in total. Still good for the times when performance right now is what matters, for example we used to have these marathon exams of up to 6 hours. Three hours in and head is getting heavy, take a Red Bull and you're good for another three hours. It'd always be a short evening but totally worth it. Same if the party is now, stay awake here and n
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I find low and regular doses of caffeine to be much more effective than single, high doses. I have a half-litre thermos full of filter coffee which gives me about 50mg of caffeine four times a day. (And because I don't crash or get insomnia, I'm not going out and buying a second or third Red Bull to keep me going.) There seems to be good evidence that low doses of caffeine are effective as performance enhancers, without having particularly serious side-effects. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/p [sciencedirect.com]
Parts of the brain (Score:5, Funny)
The memory center in the human brain is the hippocampus, a seahorse-shaped area in the medial temporal lobe of the brain.
Then why don't they call it the seahorsecampus? These guys make everything so difficult.
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>Then why don't they call it the seahorsecampus? These guys make everything so difficult.
Hippocampus is derived from the Greek words hippos (horse) and kampos (sea monster).
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My wife proposes the theory that it ... (Score:3)
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I'm going to guess it's between 30 and 36 inches away from you, between 15 and 75 degrees from straight ahead. Clockwise or counterclockwise, depending on your handedness.
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I can't even remember where I put my cup.
That's because you're married, and since you know for certain that she's going to move the damned thing there's no point in making the effort to remember.
How about caffeine & sleep depravation? (Score:2)
For example, does the caffeine whole trying to do last-minute cramming for finals overcome losing so much sleep for so many hours?
And are there implications for PTSD? (if remember things better, could that increase the chances of PTSD?)
Same old... (Score:3, Informative)
Coffee's bad for you ....
Coffee's good for you ....
Coffee's bad for you ....
Coffee's good for you ....
Same old.... (as far as I recall :-) )
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Good and bad has everything to do with what pathways are being activated, for how long, and what the side effects are. Good and bad should not be judged simply on the final result.
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Uh.....
Huh?
I was merely commenting on the fact that the common fad is to say "this is bad for you" then - a few weeks later - "this is good for you".
You were overthinking what I wrote :-)
Memorization, or attention to detail? (Score:5, Informative)
I have a PhD in sensory neuroscience from UC Berkeley. It could be the effect mentioned in TFA is sensory, not memorization.
Caffeine is known to increase acetylcholine release. Acetylcholine makes your brain pay more attention to here-and-now details than to its internal model of what's going on.
I'm also dubious about the idea that any one, simple chemical can ever make you smarter in any general way without adverse consequences. Evolution has a lot of time to scope out all simple neurochemical effects, so beware studies that suggest they've found a "smart pill". Sure, it's possible to take a drug to make you better at one specific task to the detriment of some others, but the idea that there is any simple cognitive enhancing substance would imply either "evolution couldn't mimic the effect of this substance on the brain" or "cognitive enhancement isn't an evolutionary good move". Neither seems very likely.
Re:Memorization, or attention to detail? (Score:5, Insightful)
Evolution has a lot of time to scope out all simple neurochemical effects, so beware studies that suggest they've found a "smart pill". Sure, it's possible to take a drug to make you better at one specific task to the detriment of some others, but the idea that there is any simple cognitive enhancing substance would imply either "evolution couldn't mimic the effect of this substance on the brain" or "cognitive enhancement isn't an evolutionary good move". Neither seems very likely.
I'm not seeing the evidence for strong forces selecting for better cognitive performance. It seems like there are a lot of evolutionary niches where brain-power loses out to other specializations.
Suppose there's a substance that improves overall cognitive processing, but at a metabolic cost that requires 30% more caloric intake? Or suppose it interferes with efficient storage of fat? Either of those would be a deleterious trait in pre-modern populations.
Suppose it improves cognitive processing, but reduces fertility by 50%? Again, it would be bred out rapidly.
Many of the constraints that guided our evolutionary history no longer apply. I don't expect a miracle pill, either, but saying "if cognitive enhancers existed we'd already have evolved to produce them" seems kind of disingenuous.
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I'm also dubious about the idea that any one, simple chemical can ever make you smarter in any general way without adverse consequences. Evolution has a lot of time to scope out all simple neurochemical effects, so beware studies that suggest they've found a "smart pill".
I think this is a very wise statement. In this case, caffeine is known to increase levels of stress hormones. Many studies have shown that memories during times of stress tend to be more vivid and enduring. (The extreme of this is PTSD.) So the study results are not at all surprising to me. I think more work would have to be done to tease out whether there is any independent effect.
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Did you miss the "post-study" bit in the title and abstract? Caffeine was delivered after stimulus presentation, excluding a purely sensory effect.
I guess you could do with a cup of coffee! ;)
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To be fair, the summary got it exactly backward:
In a double-blind study, participants were shown a series of images soon after taking either a caffeine pill or a placebo;
At last, a cure for Slashdot dupes? (Score:2)
Well, we can hope. Drink up, editors!
Mentat drink (Score:1)
The lips carry a stain, the breath is of a dragon, The breath is a warning.
is it "awake people are more likely to remember"? (Score:1)
All funded research is in fed database (Score:1)
If any part of the research was funded by the feds, they have to publish it electronically on the national open access publications databases.
Maybe someone else can post a link to that copy?
I'm busy, but it might be easy to do.
I like to start my day with a monster drink (Score:1)