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The association between office design and performance on demanding cognitive tasks

Author

  • Aram Seddigh
  • Cecilia Stenfors
  • Erik Berntson
  • Rasmus Bååth
  • Sverker Sikström
  • Hugo Westerlund

Summary, in English

The physical office environment has been shown to be associated with indicators of both health and performance. This study focuses on how memory performance is affected in normal working conditions compared to a quiet baseline (with low amount irrelevant stimuli) in different office types, including individual office rooms, small open-plan offices, medium-sized open-plan offices and large open-plan offices. The results showed that the drop in performance from the quiet baseline to normal working conditions was higher in larger, compared to smaller, open-plan offices. However, contrary to our hypothesis we found that employees in individual office rooms had as high drop in performance as employees in large open-plan office environments. These results indicate that employees in small open-plan offices, in comparison to large, have better possibilities to conduct cognitively demanding tasks and that individual office rooms might not be as advantageous as previously thought.

Publishing year

2015

Language

English

Pages

172-181

Publication/Series

Journal of Environmental Psychology

Volume

42

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Psychology

Keywords

  • Productivity
  • Individual office rooms
  • Immediate free recall
  • Cognitive performance
  • Office type
  • Open-plan office

Status

Published

Research group

  • Division of Cognitive Psychology

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1522-9610