Gooderham G Kyle, Handy Todd C
Psychology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
PLoS One. 2025 Jan 9;20(1):e0317253. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0317253. eCollection 2025.
Our cognitive capacities like working memory and attention are known to systematically vary over time with our physical activity levels, dietary choices, and sleep patterns. However, whether our metacognitive capacities--such as our strategic use and optimization of cognitive resources--show a similar relationship with these key lifestyle factors remains unknown. Here we addressed this question in healthy young adults by examining if physical activity, diet, and sleep patterns were predictive of self-reported metacognitive status. Participants completed a set of validated surveys assessing these lifestyle factors over the past week to month, as well as three measures of metacognition. Using multiple regression and exploratory factor analyses we identified four clusters of metacognitive processes that are sensitive to lifestyle behaviours. Specifically, knowledge of and offline regulation of cognition is linked with physical activity, on-line cognitive regulation is related to diet, and metacognitive worry is associated with sleep behaviours. These findings suggest that lifestyle behaviours do not just affect objective cognitive functioning, but also the meta-level processes we use to monitor our cognitive performance and exert strategic control over our cognitive resources.
我们已知像工作记忆和注意力这样的认知能力会随着我们的身体活动水平、饮食选择和睡眠模式而随时间系统性地变化。然而,我们的元认知能力——比如我们对认知资源的策略性运用和优化——是否与这些关键的生活方式因素呈现相似的关系仍不明确。在此,我们通过研究身体活动、饮食和睡眠模式是否能预测自我报告的元认知状态,来解决健康年轻成年人中的这一问题。参与者完成了一组经过验证的调查问卷,评估过去一周到一个月内的这些生活方式因素,以及三项元认知测量。通过多元回归和探索性因素分析,我们确定了对生活方式行为敏感的四类元认知过程。具体而言,认知的知识和离线调节与身体活动有关,在线认知调节与饮食有关,元认知担忧与睡眠行为有关。这些发现表明,生活方式行为不仅会影响客观认知功能,还会影响我们用于监控认知表现和对认知资源进行策略性控制的元水平过程。