The effect of midazolam on visual search: Implications for understanding amnesia

  1. Heekyeong Park*,,
  2. Joseph Quinlan,
  3. Edward Thornton*, and
  4. Lynne M. Reder*
  1. *Department of Psychology, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213; and Department of Anesthesiology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15213
  1. Communicated by John R. Anderson, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, October 30, 2004 (received for review July 30, 2004)

  1. Fig. 1.

    Mean accuracy of cued-recall and guessing tasks in the saline and midazolam conditions. Error bars represent standard errors of the means.


  2. Fig. 2.

    Accuracy as a function of drug and epoch. Error bars represent standard errors of the means.


  3. Fig. 3.

    RT as a function of drug and epoch. Error bars represent standard errors of the means.


  4. Fig. 4.

    RT to search targets in Old versus New configurations as a function of drug and epoch. Error bars represent standard errors of the means.


  5. Fig. 5.

    The contextual-cuing effect as a function of drug condition and Old/New configurations. Contextual cuing is defined as the difference in search performance between New and Old configuration conditions. Error bars represent standard errors of the means.


Footnotes

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