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MNN.COM › Food › Beverages
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    What's this?
Caffeine may perk up your world view
Caffeine has been shown to increase dopamine levels, explaining the positivity surrounding caffeine.

By

Charles Choi, LiveScience
Mon, Nov 12 2012 at 12:10 PM
Coffee swirl

Photo: feverblue/Flickr

Caffeine may make the world seem like a better place, helping people spot positive words, researchers have found.
 
Past research has found that people are faster and more accurate at recognizing positive words such as "happy" than negative words such as "mad," and similar effects are seen with pictures and sounds. This emotional bias is curious, given how people are equally good at remembering both positive and negative details of an event, such as words, pictures and sounds.
 
"What causes this difference?" said researcher Lars Kuchinke, an experimental psychologist at Ruhr University in Germany.
 
To see what triggers this positivity advantage, the researchers decided to experiment with caffeine. Caffeine helps lead to faster responses and fewer errors in simple mental tasks, and one might expect it would help people recognize both positive and negative words. [10 Ways to Keep Your Mind Sharp]
 
Scientists asked 66 volunteers to decide as fast and accurately as possible whether strings of letters they saw on computer screens were real words or not. Half the volunteers were given a lactose pill that had no effect on results, while the other half were given tablets containing 200 milligrams of caffeine 30 minutes before testing, equivalent to about two or three cups of coffee.
 
The investigators found volunteers who consumed caffeine tablets were more accurate by up to 7 percent at recognizing positive words than other words, with no effect seen when it came to emotionally neutral or negative words. This reveals that although caffeine improves some mental functions, "the present study shows that this may be specific for certain types of stimuli, like only positive words," Kuchinke told LiveScience.
 
Prior studies have shown caffeine probably stimulates the central nervous system by increasing activity of the brain chemical dopamine, which is linked with rewards, creativity, impulsivity and addiction. Since caffeine seemed to boost the positivity advantage, these findings suggest the root of the positivity advantage may rest in dopamine.
 
Future research might see if brain scans can verify this link with dopamine, and might also test if caffeine helps people better recognize positive faces or pictures.
 
Kuchinke and colleague Vanessa Lux detailed their findings online Nov. 7 in the journal PLoS ONE.
 
Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience. We're also on Facebook & Google+.
 
Related on LiveScience and MNN:
  • 7 Perfect Survival Foods
  • 5 Wacky Things That Are Good for Your Health
  • Top 10 Mysteries of the Mind
  • MNN: Coffee: Friend or foe?
 
This story was originally written for LiveScience and was republished with permission here. Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company.

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mikebudd's picture
mikebudd Feb 09 2013 at 1:17 PM

I already knew that several medical studies had proven that caffeine and coffee had positive effects on neurodegeneration, for instance Parkinson and Alzheimer's disease: http://ephedrinewheretobuy.com/ephedrine-where-to-buy-eca-stacks/coffee-...
Is there a potential link with the findings of this study? What I don't get here is why caffeine improves some mental functions only (positive words). Anyway it tells a lot about the complexity of neuronal processes.

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