The influences of age and caffeine on psychomotor and cognitive function

被引:0
|
作者
Katy Rees
D. Allen
Malcolm Lader
机构
[1] Section of Clinical Psychopharmacology,
[2] Institute of Psychiatry,undefined
[3] King’s College London,undefined
[4] De Crespigny Park,undefined
[5] Denmark Hill,undefined
[6] London SE5 8AF,undefined
[7] UK e-mail: david.allen@iop.bpmf.ac.uk.,undefined
来源
Psychopharmacology | 1999年 / 145卷
关键词
Key words Caffeine; Memory; Mood; Psychomotor performance; Vigilance;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Rationale: The response to caffeine is affected by a number of factors, including age. Older subjects may be more sensitive to the objective effects than younger but report fewer subjective effects. Objective: This study assessed the influence of age on the effects of caffeine on a variety of psychomotor, cognitive and subjective tests. Methods: Forty-eight healthy subjects, male and female, were recruited, 24 in the age range 20–25 and 24 in the range 50–65 years. All subjects were regular moderate caffeine drinkers and were not withdrawn from caffeine before entry to the study. A double-blind parallel group design was used with two groups of 12 subjects in each age range. One group in each age range received placebo and the other 250 mg caffeine B.P. A range of tests was used to assess psychomotor, cognitive and subjective functioning before and 1 h post-treatment. Results: Before treatment, young subjects generally performed better than older on psychomotor and cognitive tests. On the subjective tests, however, older subjects rated themselves as more alert and less tired than the younger ones. After placebo, performance and alertness improved in the younger group but declined in the older. After caffeine there were improvements in psychomotor performance and cognitive functioning in both groups, particularly in offsetting declining performance over time in the older subjects. It also produced subjective improvements in alertness. One factor to emerge was that on most assessments older subjects were better earlier in the day whereas in younger subjects performance did not show the same magnitude of decline throughout the day. Conclusions: Caffeine induced small but significant improvements in vigilance and psychomotor performance.
引用
收藏
页码:181 / 188
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Differential Contribution of Cognitive and Psychomotor Functions to the Age-Related Slowing of Speech Production
    Rodriguez-Aranda, Claudia
    Jakobsen, Mona
    JOURNAL OF THE INTERNATIONAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2011, 17 (05) : 807 - 821
  • [22] Caffeine Effect on Cognitive Function during a Stroop Task: fNIRS Study
    Yuan, Yafei
    Li, Guanghao
    Ren, Haoran
    Chen, Wei
    NEURAL PLASTICITY, 2020, 2020
  • [23] Effects of caffeine and caffeine withdrawal on mood and cognitive performance degraded by sleep restriction
    Rogers, PJ
    Heatherley, SV
    Hayward, RC
    Seers, HE
    Hill, J
    Kane, M
    PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 2005, 179 (04) : 742 - 752
  • [24] Effects of caffeine and caffeine withdrawal on mood and cognitive performance degraded by sleep restriction
    Peter J. Rogers
    Susan V. Heatherley
    Robert C. Hayward
    Helen E. Seers
    Joanne Hill
    Marian Kane
    Psychopharmacology, 2005, 179 : 742 - 752
  • [25] The Effect of Caffeine and Sleep Quality on Military Pilot Students' Flight Performance-Related Cognitive Function
    Utamatanin, Nuttaporn
    Pariwatcharakul, Pornjira
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AEROSPACE PSYCHOLOGY, 2022, 32 (2-3): : 152 - 164
  • [26] Mood and psychomotor performance effects of the first, but not of subsequent, cup-of-coffee equivalent doses of caffeine consumed after overnight caffeine abstinence
    Robelin, M
    Rogers, PJ
    BEHAVIOURAL PHARMACOLOGY, 1998, 9 (07): : 611 - 618
  • [27] Shared and Unique Influences on Age-Related Cognitive Change
    Salthouse, Timothy A.
    NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 2017, 31 (01) : 11 - 19
  • [28] Habitual caffeine consumption and its relation to memory, attention, planning capacity and psychomotor performance across multiple age groups
    Hameleers, PAHM
    Van Boxtel, MPJ
    Hogervorst, E
    Riedel, WJ
    Houx, PJ
    Buntinx, F
    Jolles, J
    HUMAN PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY-CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL, 2000, 15 (08) : 573 - 581
  • [29] DOES CAFFEINE ENHANCE OR MERELY RESTORE DEGRADED PSYCHOMOTOR PERFORMANCE
    JAMES, JE
    NEUROPSYCHOBIOLOGY, 1994, 30 (2-3) : 124 - 125
  • [30] Antihistamines considerably modulate the cognitive and psychomotor performance of human volunteers
    Zannat, Rawshan
    Uddin, Mir Muhammad Nasir
    Rahman, Md Atiar
    Aklima, Jannatul
    Al Amin, Md Mamun
    COGENT PSYCHOLOGY, 2016, 3