Stressful men should cut the coffee
coffee breaks, finds new research on caffeine handled by
researchers in the UK.
Trying to reduce feelings of stress by taking a coffee break might actually increase them - particularly in men, working alone, who believe it should help them perform faster - say Professor Peter Rogers and Dr Lindsay St. Claire at the University of Bristol in the UK.
"Our research findings suggest that the commonplace tea or coffee break might backfire in business situations, particularly where men are concerned. Far from reducing stress, it might actually make things worse,?/i> said Dr St. Claire.
Existing theories about stress management suggest that caffeine consumption can trigger stress. However, while studies into the effects of caffeine show that it can sometimes worsen anxiety, there is also evidence that it boosts confidence, alertness and sociability as well as making us better able to perform various tasks.
The Bristol research team found that caffeine did indeed heighten feelings of stress while performing stressful tasks, but unexpectedly this happened especially in men. However, effects of caffeine on performance were likely to depend on the type of task and whether participants were working alone or in teams, said the researchers.
For example, when working on mental arithmetic alone and under time pressure, caffeine might help, but when working on a collaborative task, it might undermine people's ability to get along with each other.
The study, Caffeine, Stress and Task Performance in Individuals, Dyads and Groups, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council(ESRC), also tested the impact of expectations, or whether someone who chooses to have a cup of coffee, believing it will speed reaction times, actually feels less stressed if under pressure to do something quickly.
For this reason, in one set of tests, researchers told 32 people that their coffee contained caffeine which would help their performance, another 32 that their drink did not, and a third group of 32 that they were having caffeine which causes stress-like side effects.
Unknown to the participants half of the drinks actually contained 200 mg of caffeine and the other half had none.
After drinking, all in the experiment did two stressful tasks and a series of other tests. Unexpectedly, say the reasearchers, men who had been told that their coffee contained caffeine to enhance performance had higher heart rates and felt more stressed. Actual caffeine consumption made people generally less confident about their ability to cope and, again made men feel more 'stressed?
Videos taken during the experiments showed that caffeine tended to make men look more physically tense and sound less relaxed during a stressful public speaking task. In contrast, report the researchers, caffeine tended to actually reduce ratings of stress in women.