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Wanna be smart? (10)

1 Name: kurosaika : 2015-08-20 01:16 ID:JxNvlyG4 (Image: 480x357 jpg, 25 kb) [Del]

src/1440051416778.jpg: 480x357, 25 kb
The "smart drug" modafinil actually does work for some people, improving their performance on long and complex tasks, also enhancing decision-making and planning skills, a new review of studies finds.

Modafinil, also known by its brand name Provigil, is approved by the Food and Drug Administration to treat people with sleep disorders such as narcolepsy. But the majority of the drug's users — such as students who take it to study for exams — use it off-label, believing it may help them focus. This is despite the lack of strong evidence to date showing that the drug actually works this way.

"This is the first overview of modafinil's actions in non-sleep-deprived individuals since 2008, and so we were able to include a lot of recent data," Ruairidh McLennan Battleday, a co-author of the new review and a lecturer at the University of Oxford in England, said in a statement. The recent studies of the drug have used more-complex tests of cognition than those employed previously, and found that modafinil indeed enhances thinking, he said.

In particular, the drug affects the "'higher-brain functions that rely on contribution from multiple simple cognitive processes," Battleday said.

The new findings raise ethical concerns about using modafinil, particularly if it gives students an unfair advantage in preparing for or taking tests, the researchers wrote in their review, published online Thursday Aug. 20 in the journal Neuropsychopharmacology.

Past studies showed mixed results for modafinil's effects on healthy, non-sleep-deprived people. However, for the new paper, the researchers reviewed 24 placebo-controlled studies in healthy people that were published between 1990 and 2014. The studies included more than 700 participants total, and tested a variety of aspects of thinking, including planning and decision-making, flexibility, learning, memory, and creativity.

Modafinil improved only certain features of cognition, the researchers found. In general, the drug appeared to improve what researchers call executive function, the ability to sift through new information and make plans based on it. Modafinil also somewhat enhanced people's ability to pay attention, learn and remember, the researchers found.

But the drug didn't consistently help participants on simple tests of attention, the scientists found. It had "little effect on creativity and motor excitability," they said, and it did not significantly improve people's working memory, flexibility of thought or ability to divide their attention.

Modafinil has few side effects. The 70 percent of the studies that looked for mood and side effects found only some instances of insomnia, headache, stomachache or nausea, all of which were also reported in placebo groups.

"In the face of vanishingly few side effects in these controlled environments, modafinil can be considered a cognitive enhancer," said Anna-Katharine Brem, another co-author of the study and a postdoctoral researcher at Oxford.

"However, we would like to stress the point that with any method used to enhance cognition, ethical considerations always have to be taken into account: This is an important avenue for future work to explore," Brem said.

-- http://www.livescience.com/51919-modafil-improves-attention-learning.html

2 Name: Sebby : 2015-08-20 15:41 ID:c3DrL2f9 [Del]

I've seen this before and I really wanted to take this. It just sounds too good to be true. What can you become addicted to it easily? So many questions. x.x

3 Name: Fray !W1Nq.7lGn2 : 2015-08-20 17:42 ID:/XAgeZE8 [Del]

Magic smart pill? Magic smart pill.

Seriously though this most likely is too good to be true.

4 Name: renato : 2015-08-21 02:07 ID:aZbQQclU [Del]

I think its fine if you have narcolepsy and maybe in small amounts, but would probaly have probaly have some bad long term side effects even if its just that you have trouble with memory and thinking off of them because your brain is too used to the drugs help.

5 Name: イサオ : 2015-08-23 08:47 ID:dJic8cLP [Del]

Mm wouldn't trust it, could either be placebo effect or may have other side effects not apparent short term. Not exactly a good idea to deliberately take drugs designed for something just for fun.

6 Name: Inaban : 2015-08-24 20:29 ID:VC7zz7CL [Del]

It has to have some sort of crazy side effect... I mean really. Medicines like that are too good to be true. Wouldn't trust it for a second.

7 Name: Dutch❋Bunny !lmBitchbiw : 2015-08-24 23:19 ID:GOi+mR/W [Del]

I don't trust anything that alters my state of mind, whether it's in a good way or bad way. So no, thanks.

8 Name: イサオ : 2015-08-25 04:04 ID:853DFFdx [Del]

Scientists truly don't know that much about the brain to be honest, as someone with science experience, they might have worked out a certain signaling pathway for it, though side effects are always possible and sometimes have personal implications. I.E same as drugs, some people can take more, some people can't and it can kill them.
I mean, reading around it seems that some research papers suggest inhibiting dopamine uptake via transporters, I guess I can see how that keeps you awake since cocaine essentially does the same thing, though to what extent and as for dosage I don't know. I honestly don't have much experience with the pharmacology side of science though.

9 Name: Iarrthoir : 2015-08-25 10:44 ID:+mNSxil+ [Del]

This probably knocks a person out right after use due to a ridiculous amount of fatigue. Way too good to have no catch.

10 Name: Plexus-C : 2015-08-28 01:53 ID:3C8tOu94 [Del]

My older brother used to buy shipments of 80-100 tablets. He would let me grab from them whenever I felt that I needed one. From my personal experience, they're pretty good. All they do is enhance focus and energy. There's no "high". Also, there's no crash or fatigue afterwards if you use them correctly. The only way someone could possibly abuse them is if the person uses them to stay awake for dangerous periods of time (which is quite possible).