Although clinical observations abound, substantiated evidence concerning
the effect of electroshock treatment on learning capacity, particularly
in depressed patients, is scanty and experimental findings have been
conflicting. The experiments reported here were accordingly conducted as
a pilot investiga- tion, visual learning tests involving spatial
relations being used to examine in depressed patients: - (a) The extent
to which a single electroshock (ES) impairs learning capacity, and the
amount of its restoration 30 min, four hours and twenty-eight hours
after shock. (b) The effect of repeated shocks (EOT) on learning
capacity. (c) The relationship between possibly influential factors and
changes in learn- ing performance. (d) The extent of personality change
recorded by "expressive movement" scores after three shocks. Before the
experiments, extensive testing was carried out to determine the most
suitable testing times. Important points emerging from an initial
experiment were re-investigated with a more appropriate test. Finally,
certain scores of expres- sive movement derived from a greatly improved
scoring system were used to assess personality changes resulting from
electroshock.