单选题
A Memory Drug?
It"s difficult to imagine many things that people would welcome more than a memory-enhancing drug. A memory enhancer could help eliminate forgetting associated with aging and disease. Furthermore, such a drug could help people remember past experiences more
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and help us acquire new information more easily for school and at work. As scientists learn more about
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, we are closing in on this tantalizing goal.
Some of the most exciting evidence comes from research that has built on earlier findings linking LTP and memory to identify a gene that improves memory in mice. The gene makes a protein that assists the NMDA receptor, which plays an important
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in long-term memory by helping to initiate LTP. Mice bred to have extra copies of this gene showed more activity in their NMDA receptors, more LTP, and
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performance on several different memory tasks—learning a spatial layout, recognizing familiar objects, and recalling a fear-inducing shock.
If these basic insights about genes, LTP, and the synaptic basis of memory can be
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to people-and that remains to be seen—they could pave the way for memory-enhancing treatments.
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steroids for bulking up the muscles, these drugs would bulk up memory. As exciting as this may
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, it also raises troubling issues. Consider the potential educational implications of memory-enhancing drugs. If memory enhancers were available, children
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used them might be able to acquire and retain extraordinary amounts of information, allowing them to progress far more rapidly in
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than they could otherwise. How well could the brain handle such an onslaught of information? What happens to children who don"t have access to the latest memory enhancers? Are they left behind in school—and as a result handicapped later in life?
What are the potential implications of memory-enhancing drugs for the workplace? Imagine that you are
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for a job that requires a good memory, such as a manager at a technology company or a sales position that requires remembering customers" names as well as the attributes of different products and services. Would you take a memory-enhancing drug to increase your chances of landing the position?
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people who felt uncomfortable taking such a drug find themselves cut out of lucrative career opportunities?
Memory drugs might also help take the sting out of disturbing memories that we wish we could forget
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can"t. The 2004 hit movie
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
told the story of a young man seeking just such freedom
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the painful memories of a romantic breakup. As you will see in the section on persistence later in the chapter, emotionally arousing events often create intrusive memories, and researchers have already muted emotional memories with drugs that block the action of key hormones. Should emergency workers who must confront horrifying accident scenes that can
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them with persisting memories be provided with such drugs? Should such drugs be given to rape victims who can"t forget the trauma? Memory drugs might provide some relief to such individuals. But could they also interfere with an individual"s ability to assimilate and come to terms with a difficult experience? We may find ourselves
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these kinds of questions in the not-too-distant future.