A recent study published in Neurological Sciences on Italians who were locked down for about two months last year, found an increase in distractions and mind wandering.
The study included 4000 respondents and found that 30% had experienced some degree of change in their everyday cognition.
Some of the reported problems included:
- Memory loss;
- Trouble focusing;
- Losing focus when trying to read a book or watch something online.
Professor Brett Hayes from UNSW’s School of Psychology says that the reported cognition problems during lockdown were “worse for people who had emotional issues, who were feeling depressed, or stressed and anxious”.
“They had more of these symptoms,” says Professor Hayes. “But even for those without those issues, these cognitive issues were very common.”
So, what is the reason for this?
Reportedly, living through a sort of Groundhog Day makes it harder for our brain to lay down memories and retrieve them later on.
“What we know about human memory is that the context is really important,” says Professor Hayes.
“You might be doing a job at home, chatting with a friend, or watching a movie.
“When we have those experiences, we might be focused on the main part of the experience, but our brain is actually encoding a lot of other things just incidentally, like where that’s happening, the location, where and when it’s taking place.”
According to Professor Hayes, our brain is sensitive to this background context, which helps us lay down our memories in a way that’s easy for us to retrieve those experiences in the future.
“So, when the context is changing, which it does normally in everyday life when we are moving around and visiting different places in different times of the day, then it’s easy to lay down memories and recall them,” says Professor Hayes.
“But when you are in lockdown, your opportunities to move around in the environment and engage in different activities are very limited.
And when you do get into that Groundhog Day cycle, just variations on the same thing each day, that’s when the days do tend to start blurring into each other, because we have the same context for each day.”
Professor Hayes adds that when in repeated lockdown, it’s harder for our brain to separate our experiences, which is one of the reasons why we experience memory fog during lockdown.
How to maintain memory in lockdown
Pointing to another lockdown study done in Scotland last year, Professor Hayes says that maintaining cognitive performance is correlated with social interaction.
“People who were able to maintain their online interaction more during lockdown did better at [various cognitive] tasks,” he says.
“So complete isolation is really very bad for our cognitive functioning, but if we can keep up that level of interaction to some degree with whoever is in our house or online, that seems to be good for our cognitive functioning.”
Researchers have also found that people who had conversations within the last three days were a bit more protected from cognitive issues during a long lockdown.
Other studies are looking at how people’s options are limited in Covid and have pointed to the importance of having a bit of variation and exercise every day.
“From a memory point of view, if you are able to exercise outside the house, vary those exercise paths from day to day to just to allow a different context for your brain to encode those different days, if you want to be able to remember what you did from day to day a bit better,” says Professor Hayes.
Variations in exercises and activities in your house or apartment will also help you avoid the memory fog.
Professor Hayes says there’s a close connection between good cognitive ability and physical activity.
“So, keeping up regular exercise [helps to] keep our memory and decision making in shape … during lockdown,” he says.
“There’s some evidence that even if you are really restricted – even doing something like playing Exergames (online exercise games) where you watch a screen and jump around, that does show some benefits.
“The nice thing is that you can play with your family and so there’s a social dimension as well.”
Online yoga and dancing were things that people reported as part of their activity, which he says seemed to have a beneficial effect on cognition.
“While there hasn’t been time to conduct research on the long-term effects of lockdowns on memory, the evidence so far shows that as restrictions are eased, these cognitive issues should improve,” he says.