Caffeine and Cognitive Performance in Healthy Adults: Domain-Specific Effects and Dosing Considerations

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Paulina Troncoso-Escudero
Marion Erica Feddersen Welkner
Jae Kyung Jo
Daniela Vicinansa Monaco Ferreira
Karla Andrade Ruiz
Fernando Jose Gomez Juarez
Natália Puschnick Gimenez
Jorgelina Stegmann
Henrique Balseiro Zin
Alice Campanholo de Oliveira
Yulissa Hernández Frías
Lissa Raquel Sandoval Castillo
Miray Nilufer Cimsit Kemahli
Priscila Sales Barroso
Diego Perez Paez
Letícia Cabreira dos Santos
Hanna Bennewart
Laura Amaral de Lara Resende
Siddiha Poovelil Shahulhameed
Fernando Espinoza
Paula Aranguren
Paula Bertagnoli
Sarah Burgos
Ala Hassan
Nikolaos Paschos
Carlos Roa
Roy Rosado

Abstract

Background: Caffeine is widely consumed for its potential cognitive-enhancing effects, yet findings across cognitive domains and dosing regimens remain heterogeneous.


Objectives: This systematic review aimed to evaluate the effects of low (100-200 mg) and high (300-400 mg) doses of caffeine on cognitive performance, specifically attention, memory, and executive function in healthy adults aged 18-60 years, compared to placebo.


Methods: We included randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that evaluated the effects of low-dose (100-200 mg) or high-dose (300-400 mg) caffeine on cognitive performance in healthy adults (aged 18-60 years). These studies assessed cognitive domains such as attention, memory, or executive function using standardized cognitive tests. Studies were excluded if they involved pediatric (<18 years) or elderly populations (>60 years), individuals with cognitive impairments, or if they assessed non-cognitive outcomes. Databases searched included PubMed, Embase, Scopus, and Web of Science, from 2015 until 2025. Risk of bias in the included studies was assessed using Cochrane Risk-of-Bias (RoB2-tool). Data extraction and analysis were performed using Covidence.


Results: Twenty RCTs (n = 951; ages 18–60) were included. Low-to-moderate caffeine doses (100–200 mg) consistently improved sustained attention, vigilance, and reaction time, with stronger effects observed in low habitual consumers. Working memory showed overall improvement, though findings varied by task and baseline caffeine intake. Executive function outcomes were heterogeneous, with task-specific benefits but no consistent pattern. Mood and arousal frequently improved, while higher doses (≥300 mg) produced null or inconsistent effects. Importantly, although studies evaluated varying caffeine doses, none directly compared low versus high doses within the same experimental design, precluding firm conclusions regarding dose–response superiority. Risk of bias was mostly moderate, reflecting issues with blinding and outcome reporting.


Conclusions: Caffeine appears to exert domain-specific cognitive effects in healthy adults, with more consistent benefits observed in attention-related measures than in executive function. The absence of direct low–high dose comparisons limits conclusions regarding optimal dosing; though trials with low dose seem to produce larger effects. Future trials should directly compare dosing strategies and comprehensively assess multiple cognitive domains to clarify potential tradeoffs between attentional enhancement and executive performance.


 

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Caffeine and Cognitive Performance in Healthy Adults: Domain-Specific Effects and Dosing Considerations. (2026). Principles and Practice of Clinical Research, 11(4). https://doi.org/10.21801/ppcrj.2025.114.7
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How to Cite

Caffeine and Cognitive Performance in Healthy Adults: Domain-Specific Effects and Dosing Considerations. (2026). Principles and Practice of Clinical Research, 11(4). https://doi.org/10.21801/ppcrj.2025.114.7

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