During Ramadan, people of Muslim faith fast by not eating or drinking between sunrise and sunset. This is likely to have physiological and psychological consequences for fasters, and societal and economic impacts on the wider population. We investigate whether, during this voluntary and temporally limited fast, reminders of food can impair the fasters' reaction time and accuracy on a non-food-related test of cognitive control. Using a repeated measures design in a sample of Ramadan fasters (N = 190), we find that when food is made salient, fasters are slower and less accurate during Ramadan compared with after Ramadan. Control participants perform similarly across time. Furthermore, during Ramadan performances vary by how recently people ha...
Background During Ramadan, observant Muslims fast from sunrise to sunset for a month. Knowing whethe...
The past two decades have seen a rise in the number of investigations examining the health-related e...
The study explored the self-generated coping strategies employed by Muslim athletes from South East ...
During Ramadan, people of Muslim faith fast by not eating or drinking between sunrise and sunset. Th...
Ramadan requires individuals to abstain from food and fluid intake between sunrise and sunset; physi...
The Muslim faith requires individuals to fast between the hours of sunrise and sunset during the mon...
We examined the effects of Ramadan fasting on cognitive function in 17 female athletes. Data were ob...
Ramadan requires individuals to abstain from food and fluid intake between sunrise and sunset; physi...
The aim of this review was to highlight the potent effects of intermittent fasting on the cognitive ...
Ramadan fasting has recently resulted in fasts exceeding 19 hours in daily duration. This study exam...
Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, p...
We investigate experimentally the impact on prosocial behavior of the religious observance of Ramada...
Adult Muslims have a religious obligation to fast every day for 29-30 days in Ramadan. In fasting in...
This study aimed to examine the cross-sectional relationship between Ramadan fasting as a spiritual ...
This study assessed selected measures of cognitive function in trained cyclists who observed dayligh...
Background During Ramadan, observant Muslims fast from sunrise to sunset for a month. Knowing whethe...
The past two decades have seen a rise in the number of investigations examining the health-related e...
The study explored the self-generated coping strategies employed by Muslim athletes from South East ...
During Ramadan, people of Muslim faith fast by not eating or drinking between sunrise and sunset. Th...
Ramadan requires individuals to abstain from food and fluid intake between sunrise and sunset; physi...
The Muslim faith requires individuals to fast between the hours of sunrise and sunset during the mon...
We examined the effects of Ramadan fasting on cognitive function in 17 female athletes. Data were ob...
Ramadan requires individuals to abstain from food and fluid intake between sunrise and sunset; physi...
The aim of this review was to highlight the potent effects of intermittent fasting on the cognitive ...
Ramadan fasting has recently resulted in fasts exceeding 19 hours in daily duration. This study exam...
Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, p...
We investigate experimentally the impact on prosocial behavior of the religious observance of Ramada...
Adult Muslims have a religious obligation to fast every day for 29-30 days in Ramadan. In fasting in...
This study aimed to examine the cross-sectional relationship between Ramadan fasting as a spiritual ...
This study assessed selected measures of cognitive function in trained cyclists who observed dayligh...
Background During Ramadan, observant Muslims fast from sunrise to sunset for a month. Knowing whethe...
The past two decades have seen a rise in the number of investigations examining the health-related e...
The study explored the self-generated coping strategies employed by Muslim athletes from South East ...