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Accepted for/Published in: Journal of Medical Internet Research

Date Submitted: Jan 13, 2021
Date Accepted: Feb 25, 2021
Date Submitted to PubMed: Feb 26, 2021

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Computer Mouse Movements as an Indicator of Work Stress: Longitudinal Observational Field Study

Banholzer N, Feuerriegel S, Fleisch E, Bauer GF, Kowatsch T

Computer Mouse Movements as an Indicator of Work Stress: Longitudinal Observational Field Study

J Med Internet Res 2021;23(4):e27121

DOI: 10.2196/27121

PMID: 33632675

PMCID: 8052599

Computer mouse movements as an indicator of work stress: A longitudinal observational field study

  • Nicolas Banholzer; 
  • Stefan Feuerriegel; 
  • Elgar Fleisch; 
  • Georg Friedrich Bauer; 
  • Tobias Kowatsch

ABSTRACT

Background:

Work stress afflicts individual health and well-being. These negative effects could be mitigated through regular monitoring of employees’ stress. Such monitoring becomes even more important as the digital transformation of the economy implies profound changes of working conditions.

Objective:

To investigate whether the computer mouse can be used for continuous monitoring and early detection of work stress in the field.

Methods:

We hypothesized that stress is associated with a speed-accuracy tradeoff in computer mouse movements (CMMs). To test this hypothesis, we conducted a longitudinal field study at a large business organization, where CMMs from regular work activities were monitored over seven weeks (70 subjects, n=1,829 observations). A Bayesian regression model was used to estimate whether self-reported acute work stress was associated with a speed-accuracy tradeoff in CMMs.

Results:

There was a negative association between stress and the two-way interaction term of mouse speed and accuracy (mean = −0.36, lower = −0.66, upper = −0.08), which means that stress was associated with a speed-accuracy tradeoff. The estimated effect was not sensitive to different processing of the data and remained negative after controlling for the demographics, health, and personality traits of subjects.

Conclusions:

Self-reported acute stress can be inferred from CMMs, specifically in the form of a speed-accuracy tradeoff. This finding suggests to use regular analysis of CMMs for the early and scalable detection of work stress on the job and thus promises more timely and effective stress management.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Banholzer N, Feuerriegel S, Fleisch E, Bauer GF, Kowatsch T

Computer Mouse Movements as an Indicator of Work Stress: Longitudinal Observational Field Study

J Med Internet Res 2021;23(4):e27121

DOI: 10.2196/27121

PMID: 33632675

PMCID: 8052599

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