AI Article Synopsis

  • L-theanine, an amino acid in tea, may enhance attention by reducing distractions, with more benefit seen in simple tasks than complex ones.
  • A study with 32 healthy young adults tested three doses of L-theanine (100, 200, 400 mg) compared to a placebo on attentional performance in various tasks.
  • Results showed that lower doses (100 and 200 mg) improved simple reaction times, but not complex tasks, confirming L-theanine's beneficial effects in simpler attentional tasks.

Article Abstract

Background: L-theanine is a non-protein-forming amino acid found in tea. Previous research shows high doses (100-400 mg) of L-theanine enhances attention, mainly by reducing mind wandering and distracter processing. We hypothesized that these indirect mechanisms could significantly improve the performance of low-level attentional tasks, whereas the relative contribution could be less in complex attentional tasks that require active, higher-order processing of target stimuli.

Methods: To test this hypothesis, we conducted a double-blind, placebo-controlled, counterbalanced, four-way crossover study in 32 healthy young adults, where we compared the effects of three doses of L-theanine (100, 200 and 400 mg) with a placebo (distilled water), administered before and 50 min after dosing, on three attentional tasks from the Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery [viz. Reaction Time (RTI)-visuomotor speed, Rapid Visual Information Processing (RVP)-sustained attention, and Stop Signal Task (SST)-inhibitory control]. Results were analyzed in dose × time repeated measures ANOVA models, with subsequent pairwise comparisons.

Results: Active doses significantly improved reaction times in the RTI (100-200 mg) and RVP (200-400 mg) tasks from baseline ( < 0.05), but once controlled for the change-from-baseline caused by placebo, only the RTI simple reaction times showed significant improvements, following 100 mg (Δ = 16.3 ms,  = 0.009) and 200 mg (Δ = 16.9 ms,  = 0.009) of L-theanine.

Conclusions: Consistent with our hypothesis, these findings suggest that L-theanine significantly improves attention in simple visuomotor tasks, but not in more complex sustained attention tasks, or executive control tasks that require top-down inhibition of pre-active responses.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1028415X.2022.2136884DOI Listing

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