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Sedentary Activities and Passive-to-Intense Effects on Neuro-Cognitive States
Sponsor: Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Valparaiso
Summary
Prolonged sedentary behavior is linked to poorer metabolic health, yet its effect on cognitive load and brain function remains unclear. Evidence indicates that "mentally active" sedentary tasks (e.g., reading) may support cognition, whereas "mentally passive" tasks (e.g., scrolling social media) may impair it. The cognitive demands associated with these behaviors across the general population are still poorly defined. This project will compare the acute neurophysiological and perceptual responses elicited by mentally active versus passive sedentary tasks across various age groups and in individuals with specific health conditions (i.e., obesity), clarifying how these behaviors differ in the cognitive load they impose. Neuro-cognitive, physiological, and perceptual responses will be assessed with a multimodal battery that includes portable electroencephalography combined with functional near-infrared spectroscopy (EEG + fNIRS; MUSE), eye-tracking (Pupil Core), alertness and visual fatigue via critical flicker fusion testing (CFFT; Lafayette Instrument), autonomic balance through heart-rate variability (HRV) recorded with a Polar H10 monitor, and the self-reported cognitive load assessed using the NASA Task Load Index (NASA-TLX). We hypothesise that mentally passive sedentary activities will elicit a lower cognitive load than mentally active tasks. By comparing different age groups and health conditions within a single protocol, the study will generate an initial set of group-specific data; subsequent independent studies can build on these findings to explore moderation effects in greater depth. Collectively, the results will provide both the theoretical rationale and the empirical evidence needed to sustain the "mentally active" versus "mentally passive" terminology in sedentary-behaviour research, with the ultimate aim of improving mental and cognitive health.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
5 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
8
Start Date
2025-03-01
Completion Date
2026-05-30
Last Updated
2025-07-25
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Conditions
Interventions
Maximum Cognitive Load
Participants will perform a working memory task (through N-back 1-to-3) to evaluate the upper limit of cognitive demand.
Mental active/pasive activities
Participants will engage in 7 activities, presented in a randomly assigned order across two separate days, to assess their impact on cognitive load: 1. playing a videogame (Tetris ®) 2. listening a podcast (including a final question) 3. watching a documentary (including a final question) 4. reading a document extract (including a final question) 5. watch a reality show extract (including a final question) 6. listening music, they like it 7. scrolling their Tik-Tok/Instagram
Baseline Cognitive Load
Participants will sit quietly for 5 minutes to establish baseline spontaneous neurophysiological parameters.
Locations (1)
Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso
Viña del Mar, Chile