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AbstractAbstract



The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-2019)-induced changes in the workplace present a timely opportunity for human resource management practitioners to consider and remediate the deleterious effects of noise, a commonly cited complaint of employees working in open-plan office (OPO) environments. While self-reports suggest that OPO noise is perceived as a stressor, there is little experimental research comprehensively investigating the effects of noise on employees in terms of their cognitive performance, physiological indicators of stress, and affect. Employing a simulated office setting, we compared the effects of a typical OPO auditory environment to a quieter private office auditory environment on a range of objective and subjective measures of well-being and performance. While OPO noise did not reduce immediate cognitive task performance compared to the quieter environment, it did reduce psychological well-being as evidenced by self-reports of mood, facial expressions of emotion, and physiological indicators of stress in the form of heartrate and skin conductivity. Our research highlights the importance of using a multimodal approach to assess the impact of workplace stressors such as noise. Such an approach will allow HR practitioners to make data-driven recommendations about the design and modification of workspaces to minimize negative effects and support employee well-being.

Open office plans are satanic

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fact ✅👹

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smaller office rooms are a status symbol

5 person rooms: you're the bimbo. ”human resource”

3 person: you've been granted the status of part of the staff. But don't let that come to your head: Mercenaries are part of the social structure but still at the bottom. You will be sacrificed when armies clash against one another.

1 person rooms: we value you as a real part of the company. Limbo inbetween.

Your name on the door of the room: congrats, your existence has been acknowledged a societal role. This was the absolute minimum back in the day when one person had the role of the village pastor or the butcher. Nowadays it's a status symbol.

Secretary in front of the room: You have something to say. You can allocate the human resources on a whiteboard. Don't forget to kick downwards regularly or your mecenaries will forgget to know their place

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so conveniently timed as to support the current (then current) thing.

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current thing?

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(then) current... "it'd be too dangerous to work from an office (covid, currently), not to mention they're loud and unpleasant"

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