Researchers found that in comparison with placebo, the subjects who took cocaine found it more difficult to recognize negative emotions. They also found that subjects who showed a larger cortisol response after taking cocaine, had a less marked impairment of negative emotions. When they were intoxicated with cocaine, their performance was ten percent worse compared to their performance during placebo, in recognizing both sadness and anger.
Lead researcher Kim Kuypers of the Maastricht University said that this was the first study to look at the short-term effect of cocaine on emotions and showed that a single dose interfered with a person's ability to recognize negative emotions, such as anger and sadness.
Kuypers said this could explain why cocaine-users reported higher levels of sociability when intoxicated, simply because they could not recognize negative emotions. The new study is published in the Journal
European Neuropsychopharmacology.
Source: ANI