Rationale
Although it is widely believed that caffeine can enhance human performance and mood, the validity of this belief has been
questioned, giving rise to debate. The central question is whether superior performance and mood after caffeine represent
net benefits, or whether differences between caffeine and control conditions are due to reversal of adverse withdrawal effects.
Objectives
To provide a focussed review of relevant experimental studies with the aim of clarifying current understanding regarding the
effects of caffeine on human performance and mood.
Methods
To avoid the shortcomings of standard placebo-controlled studies, which are ambiguous due to failure to control for the confounding
influence of withdrawal reversal, three main experimental approaches have been employed: studies that compare consumers and
low/non-consumers, pre-treatment and ad lib consumption studies, and long-term withdrawal studies.
Results
Of the three approaches, only long-term withdrawal studies are capable of unambiguously revealing the net effects of caffeine.
Overall, there is little evidence of caffeine having beneficial effects on performance or mood under conditions of long-term
caffeine use vs abstinence. Although modest acute effects may occur following initial use, tolerance to these effects appears
to develop in the context of habitual use of the drug.
Conclusions
Appropriately controlled studies show that the effects of caffeine on performance and mood, widely perceived to be net beneficial
psychostimulant effects, are almost wholly attributable to reversal of adverse withdrawal effects associated with short periods
of abstinence from the drug.
Keywords Caffeine - Performance - Mood - Sleep restriction - Withdrawal reversal - Fatigue - Alertness