Zack Lynch is author of The Neuro Revolution: How Brain Science Is Changing Our World (St. Martin's Press, July 2009).
As I wrote in wake up drivers, Provigil has recently been approved by the FDA for use by shift workers. Given the amount of caffeine university professors, bloggers and others are consuming, perhaps the FDA should consider extending it's use further. Brad Delong posts the milligrams of caffeine he and a few other professors drink each day:
Brad DeLong, professor of economics, UC Berkeley: TOTAL: 373.25 mg
Philippe Bourgois, professor of medical anthropology, UCSF TOTAL: 310 mg
Daniel A. Mendelsohn, frequent lecturer in classics, Princeton: TOTAL: 1,419 mg
John E. Sexton, president of New York University:TOTAL: 919 mg
While not everyone desires the neurotransmitter boost that caffeine provides, it is clear that many of us continue to search for a neurocompetitive advantage. So while I wait for more effective cogniceuticals to be developed, I guess I'll just head down to Cafe XO for my morning dose.
Steve Klinger, Strategic Marketing Manager for a semiconductor company: TOTAL 690 mg. I often find that I am at a neurocompetitive disadvantage to my colleagues on the east coast who are 200+ mg into their day at 8AM Pacific.
Permalink to CommentLike I always say, without my two cups of coffee in the morning, I'd be a mere mortal.
Permalink to Comment