Effect of Coffee on the Speed of Subject-Paced Information Processing
- 1 January 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by S. Karger AG in Neuropsychobiology
- Vol. 16 (2-3) , 126-130
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000118312
Abstract
A continuously subject-paced and monetarily reinforced information-processing task was used to test whether caffeine might stimulate performance beyond the ceiling imposed by fatigue. A 3 .times. 2 design was adopted with the three doses 0, 150, and 450 mg caffeine and with decaffeinated coffee and fruit juice as vehicles. Two groups of 10 subjects selected to represent extremes on the extraversion-introversion scale participated in the experiment. The results revealed no differences between the two groups nor between the two drug vehicles, but caffeine at both dose levels improved performance significantly. Fatigue-induced performance decrements across the sessions reached significance, but no interaction was obtained between fatigue and drug action, supporting the view that caffeine can improve performance beyond a mere restoration of fatigue.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Untersuchung der raschen Informationsverarbeitung von Probanden mit Hilfe eines mentalen BelastungstestsInternational Journal of Public Health, 1985
- Effect of caffeine on performances of a perceptual-restructuring task at different stages of practicePsychopharmacology, 1982
- Tolerance to the humoral and hemodynamic effects of caffeine in man.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1981
- Effect of pregnancy on the pharmacokinetics of caffeineEuropean Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1981
- The interactive effect of introversion-extraversion with caffeine induced arousal on verbal performanceJournal of Research in Personality, 1980
- Der Einfluß von Koffein auf die motorische Reaktions- und die visuell-mentale VerarbeitungszeitZeitschrift Fur Ernahrungswissenschaft, 1979
- EFFECTS OF CAFFEINE INGESTION ON METABOLISM AND EXERCISE PERFORMANCE1978
- PSYCHOTROPIC EFFECTS OF CAFFEINE IN MAN .2. ALERTNESS PSYCHOMOTOR COORDINATION AND MOOD1965