Chewing gum temporarily improves attention and alertness for about 15-20 minutes after you stop chewing.
Chewing Gum Sharpens Your Focus—But Only Briefly
Need a quick mental boost before a test or important meeting? Pop some gum—but stop chewing before you actually need to focus. Research shows that chewing gum temporarily enhances attention and alertness, though the effects only last about 15-20 minutes after you spit it out.
Here's where it gets interesting: chewing gum during a task doesn't help much, and might actually hurt your performance. The sweet spot is chewing beforehand, then tossing it when it's time to concentrate.
Your Brain on Bubble Gum
Scientists have identified several mechanisms behind gum's cognitive effects. Increased cerebral blood flow tops the list—PET imaging shows 25% more blood flowing to brain regions associated with motor function during chewing, particularly in the fronto-temporal cortices and cerebellum. That extra blood delivers more oxygen and glucose, the brain's primary fuel.
Brain scans reveal that chewing activates more than just the regions controlling jaw movement. The act lights up the:
- Prefrontal cortex (decision-making and attention)
- Hippocampus (memory formation)
- Striatum (motor control and reward processing)
- Sensorimotor cortex and cerebellum (coordination)
EEG studies document increases in alpha and beta wave power during chewing, particularly with flavored gum, reflecting heightened alertness.
The Science Gets Complicated
Here's where researchers start arguing. While some studies show improvements in sustained attention, working memory, and processing speed, others find no benefits at all. A 2024 neuroimaging review analyzing 32 studies concluded that while gum chewing reliably activates brain circuits tied to attention and stress regulation, scientists can't yet directly link these neural changes to the behavioral improvements observed in other experiments.
One research team tested subjects on 25 different cognitive measures and found improvements on exactly one—sustained attention. Other studies failed to find any effects on memory, attention, or learning.
Why the Mixed Results?
Timing matters. The cognitive benefits appear when you chew before a task, not during. Scientists suspect this is due to dual-task interference—your brain can't efficiently handle both chewing and complex thinking simultaneously, since they compete for the same mental resources.
The effects also fade fast. Most studies showing positive results found benefits lasting only 15-20 minutes after chewing stops, explaining why cramming a full pack during a three-hour exam won't turn you into Einstein.
A 2024 study on functional chewing gum (fortified with vitamins and nutrients) found it reduced errors on attention tasks compared to placebo, but notably, regular gum produced similar benefits. The act of chewing itself, not special ingredients, seems to be what counts.
So yes, chewing gum can give your brain a modest, temporary boost—just don't expect miracles, and definitely spit it out before the real work begins.
