Authors
ANDREW Smith, Anna Kendrick, Andrea Maben, Jenny Salmon
Publication date
1994/2/1
Journal
Appetite
Volume
22
Issue
1
Pages
39-55
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
Two experiments examined the effect of breakfast (1·89 MJ) and caffeine (4 mg/kg) on cognitive performance, mood and cardiovascular functioning. In the first experiment, breakfast had no effect on performance of sustained attention tasks, but it increased pulse rate and influenced mood. The mood effects after breakfast differed between a cooked breakfast and a cereal/toast breakfast. In contrast to the effects of breakfast, this relatively high does of caffeine improved performance of the sustained attention tasks, increased blood pressure and increased mental alertness. In the second experiment, effects of a breakfast and caffeine on mood and cardiovascular functions confirmed the results of the first study. The breakfast improved performance on free recall and recognition memory tasks, had no effect on a semantic memory task and impaired the accuracy of performing a logical reasoning task. In contrast to this …
Total citations
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