Drinking alcohol may improve your memory, claims study

Researchers from the University of Exeter in the UK gave 88 social drinkers a word-learning task

Press Trust of India  |  London 

Drinking alcohol may improve your memory, claims study

just after learning something new may help better retain the in our memory, a study has claimed.

Researchers from the University of Exeter in the UK gave 88 a word-learning task.

Participants were then split in two groups at random and told either to drink as much as they liked (the average was four units) or not to drink at all.

The next day, they all did the same task again - and those who had drunk remembered more of what they had learned.

The researchers stressed that this limited positive effect should be considered alongside the well-established negative effects of excessive on and mental and physical

"Our research not only showed that those who drank did better when repeating the word-learning task, but that this effect was stronger among those who drank more," said Celia Morgan, professor at the University of Exeter.

"The causes of this effect are not fully understood, but the leading explanation is that blocks the learning of new and therefore the brain has more resources available to lay down other recently learned into long-term memory," said Morgan.

"The theory is that the hippocampus - the brain area really important in - switches to 'consolidating' memories, transferring from short into longer-term memory," she said.

The effect noted by the researchers has been shown under laboratory conditions before, but this is the first study to test it in a natural setting, with people in their homes.

The study was published in the journal Scientific Reports.