Repetitive Action and Cognitive Performance

Authors

  • Wei Hong Lane Tech High School

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47611/jsrhs.v12i1.4052

Keywords:

Critical thinking, Cognitive science, Cognition, Neuro Science

Abstract

For many High School students, the repetitive action such as chewing gum is the ideal tool to help them achieve a consistent period of clear focus and wakefulness. However, as a chewing gum enthusiast, I have recently noticed a very unexpected pattern in my concentration performance when chewing gum compared to the task performed. Due to this particular reason, a study was designed in order to determine the type of task being performed and its relationship to the effectiveness of repetitive action (this study will only examine the repetitive action of chewing) on concentration when performing different tasks (Complex task & Simple task). The research study includes a review of literature, survey, and data analysis. The review of already existing literature regarding chewing gum and cognitive performance suggests that the action of chewing can serve as a distraction in specific environments (such as during an exam) and participants of the Tucha and Simpson study only showed more sustained attention 30 minutes into the study, with the prior time suffering from less sustained attention than usual. The survey data suggests a pattern between sustained attention in relation to the task performed. While chewing gum, the subject’s performance worsens while conducting a complex task (tasks requiring critical thinking skills), such as completing exams, solving puzzles, and memorizing specific details, but improves while conducting repetitive or hands-on tasks, such as exercising, copying, and coloring. The pattern may also exist between high accuracy tasks and low accuracy tasks, therefore accuracy may also be a distinguishing factor for chewing gum’s cognitive influence. 

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References or Bibliography

Tucha and Simpson (The role of time on task performance in modifying the effects of gum chewing on attention 2011)https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21192998/

Allen, A., & Smith, A. (2015). Chewing Gum: Cognitive Performance, Mood, Well-Being, and Associated Physiology. Hindawi. Retrieved 11 June 2022, from https://www.hindawi.com/journals/bmri/2015/654806/.

Hirano, Y., & Onozuka, M. (2015). Chewing and attention: a positive effect on sustained attention. BioMed Research International, 2015, 367026. https://doi.org/10.1155/2015/367026

Johnson, A. J., & Miles, C. (2008). Chewing Gum and context-dependent memory: the Independent Roles of Chewing Gum and Mint Flavour. British Journal of Psychology, 99(2), 293–306. https://doi.org/10.1348/000712607x228474

Published

02-28-2023

How to Cite

Hong, W. (2023). Repetitive Action and Cognitive Performance. Journal of Student Research, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.47611/jsrhs.v12i1.4052

Issue

Section

HS Research Projects