FRIDAY, Aug. 27 (HealthDay News) — Alcoholics are unaware of their memory problems and overestimate their memory capacities, a new study finds.
French researchers investigated episodic and metamemory in alcoholics. Their findings are published online and in the November print issue of the journal Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research.
“In this study, we investigated episodic memory, which is the memory system in charge of the encoding, storage and retrieval of personally experienced events, and which is known to be impaired in chronic alcoholism,” study corresponding author Anne-Pascale Le Berre, a doctoral student in neuropsychology at the Universite de Caen/Basse-Normandie in France, said in a journal news release.
The researchers also tested metamemory, which is “knowledge [that] enables us to adapt to our behavior in everyday life and to use our memory skills as efficiently as possible,” Le Berre explained.
“Metamemory can refer to the knowledge someone has about memory processing in general, and their own memory functioning in particular. For example, if someone often forgets to buy things in the supermarket, he or she can write down a shopping list. This knowledge enables people to anticipate and implement appropriate strategies when performing a memory task. Metamemory can also refer to activity during a memory task. For example, a student first studies for an exam, and then evaluates his or her level of knowledge. If confident, he or she can stop studying, but if not, they can study more or adjust their learning strategy,” Le Berre said in the news release.
The study included 28 alcoholic patients and 28 non-alcoholic participants. Their metamemory was assessed using a “feeling-of-knowing” measure, which compares a person’s predictions about future memory performance during a memory task and actual performance. The participants also completed a Metamemory in Adulthood questionnaire. In addition, their episodic memory and executive functioning were evaluated.
“Regarding the [feeling-of-knowing] measure, alcoholic patients did not predict accurately their future memory performance,” Le Berre said. “They had a tendency to overestimate their memory capacities, believing themselves capable of recognizing the correct word when in fact they subsequently failed to do so.”
And despite their well-established episodic memory problems, the alcoholic participants mistakenly believed their memory was as effective as the non-alcoholic participants, the investigators found.
“This overestimation of episodic memory abilities in alcoholics has unquestionable clinical implications,” said Le Berre in the news release. “For example, after being physically weaned off alcohol, patients suffering from chronic alcoholism often undergo cognitive-behavioral treatment involving methods during which they are taught to anticipate risky situations, that is, situations with a high risk of relapse.”
However, she added, “if . . . they overestimate their memory abilities, they will benefit only partially from their clinical treatment, since they will labor under the illusion that they have sufficiently consolidated this important clinical information for everyday life, whereas the reality is actually very different.”
More information
The U.S. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism has more about how alcohol can damage the brain.