Got the first hard data on PRL-8-53 improving long term memory. I felt like the clinical trial was poorly designed to assess gains in higher performing individuals. I came up with a modified version of it.
Had a friend generate two lists of 100 pseudorandom 6 letter words, with a 50-word sublist for each. Made two pills, one with 5mg PRL-8-53 mixed with baking soda, the other only baking soda.
On the first day, I took pill A and waited an hour. Then was studied 50 word sublist A for 5 minutes. At 24h after, I tried to pick out the 50 words on the sublist out of 100 item wordlist A. I correctly identified 21 of them.
After waiting another day, I repeated the procedure with pill B and sublist+wordlist B, again trying to pick out the words at t=24h. This time I scored 48.
I'll let you guess which one was placebo
Protip: Placebo does not result in 228% of baseline performance on memory retention
I'll have to repeat this study with larger doses, and larger wordlists/different datasets.
Edit: Should add this was still on 5mg Selegiline daily. This may be effecting results to some degree.
Should also add I ran tests on short term memory for digit retention. Scored 11 on placebo and 12 on PRL. Clearly I'm a high preformer, and clearly PRL isn't doing much if anything there. Had much better results with Sunifiram on improving digit retention.
Hey 3AlarmLampscooter, try picking out the words from list A and B again and see what results you get. And tell us how old you are if you don't mind. Are you prescribed selegiline? Why do you take it?
Edited by Breezey, 17 November 2013 - 02:59 PM.