Maintenance Notice

Due to necessary scheduled maintenance, the JMIR Publications website will be unavailable from Wednesday, July 01, 2020 at 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM EST. We apologize in advance for any inconvenience this may cause you.

Who will be affected?

Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Human Factors

Date Submitted: Feb 14, 2022
Date Accepted: Jun 13, 2022

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

Alignment Between Heart Rate Variability From Fitness Trackers and Perceived Stress: Perspectives From a Large-Scale In Situ Longitudinal Study of Information Workers

Martinez GJ, Grover T, Mattingly SM, Mark G, D’Mello S, Aledavood T, Akbar F, Robles-Granda P, Striegel A

Alignment Between Heart Rate Variability From Fitness Trackers and Perceived Stress: Perspectives From a Large-Scale In Situ Longitudinal Study of Information Workers

JMIR Hum Factors 2022;9(3):e33754

DOI: 10.2196/33754

PMID: 35925662

PMCID: 9389384

On the Alignment between Heart rate Variability from Fitness Trackers and Perceived Stress: Perspectives from a Large-Scale In-Situ Longitudinal Study of Information Workers

  • Gonzalo J Martinez; 
  • Ted Grover; 
  • Stephen M. Mattingly; 
  • Gloria Mark; 
  • Sidney D’Mello; 
  • Talayeh Aledavood; 
  • Fatema Akbar; 
  • Pablo Robles-Granda; 
  • Aaron Striegel

ABSTRACT

Background:

Stress can have adverse effects on health and wellbeing. Informed by laboratory findings that Heart Rate Variability (HRV) decreases in response to an induced stress response, recent efforts to monitor perceived stress in the wild have focused on HRV measured through wearable devices. However, it is not clear that the well-established association between perceived stress and HRV replicates in naturalistic settings without explicit stress inductions and research-grade sensors.

Objective:

This work aims to quantify the strength of the associations between HRV and perceived daily stress using wearable devices in real-world settings.

Methods:

In the main study, 657 participants wore a fitness tracker and completed 14,695 Ecological Momentary Assessments (EMAs) assessing perceived stress, anxiety, positive affect, and negative affect across eight weeks. In the follow-up study, roughly a year later, 327 of the same participants wore the same fitness tracker and completed 1,373 EMAs assessing perceived stress at the most stressful time of the day over a one-week period. We used mixed-effects generalized linear models to predict EMA responses from HRV features calculated over varying time windows from 5-minutes long to 24h long.

Results:

Across all time windows, the models explained an average of 1% (Marginal R2) of the variance. Models using HRV features computed from an 8AM to 6PM time window (namely work hours) outperformed other time windows using HRV features calculated closer to the survey response time, but still explained a small amount (2.2% of the variance). HRV features that were associated with perceived stress were the LF to HF ratio (LF/HF), VLF power, Triangular Index, and SDANN. Additionally, we found that while HRV was also predictive of other related measures, namely anxiety, negative affect, and positive affect, it was a significant predictor of stress after controlling for these other constructs. In the follow-up study, calculating HRV when participants reported their most stressful time of the day was less predictive and provided a worse fit (R2 = 0.022) than the work hours time window (R2 = 0.032).

Conclusions:

A significant but small relationship between perceived stress and HRV was found. Thus, although HRV is associated with perceived stress in laboratory settings, the strength of that association diminishes in real-life settings. HRV might be more reflective of perceived stress in the presence of specific and isolated stressors and research-grade sensing. Relying on wearable-derived HRV alone might not be sufficient to detect stress in naturalistic settings and should not be considered a proxy for perceived stress but rather one component of a complex phenomenon.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Martinez GJ, Grover T, Mattingly SM, Mark G, D’Mello S, Aledavood T, Akbar F, Robles-Granda P, Striegel A

Alignment Between Heart Rate Variability From Fitness Trackers and Perceived Stress: Perspectives From a Large-Scale In Situ Longitudinal Study of Information Workers

JMIR Hum Factors 2022;9(3):e33754

DOI: 10.2196/33754

PMID: 35925662

PMCID: 9389384

Download PDF


Request queued. Please wait while the file is being generated. It may take some time.

© The authors. All rights reserved. This is a privileged document currently under peer-review/community review (or an accepted/rejected manuscript). Authors have provided JMIR Publications with an exclusive license to publish this preprint on it's website for review and ahead-of-print citation purposes only. While the final peer-reviewed paper may be licensed under a cc-by license on publication, at this stage authors and publisher expressively prohibit redistribution of this draft paper other than for review purposes.