New study settles the debate between open-plan vs private offices
Briefly

New study settles the debate between open-plan vs private offices
"Many organisations don't need as much floor space or as many desks, given that many staff now do a mix of hybrid work from home and the office. But on days when more staff are required to be in, office spaces can feel noticeably busier and noisier. Despite so much focus on getting workers back into offices, there has been far less focus on the impacts of returning to open-plan workspaces."
"In a recently published study, researchers at a Spanish university fitted 26 people, aged in their mid-20s to mid-60s, with wireless electroencephalogram (EEG) headsets. EEG testing can measure how hard the brain is working by tracking electrical activity through sensors on the scalp. Participants completed simulated office tasks, such as monitoring notifications, reading and responding to emails, and memorising and recalling lists of words."
"Each participant was monitored while completing the tasks in two different settings: an open-plan workspace with colleagues nearby, and a small enclosed work "pod" with clear glazed panels on one side. The researchers focused on the frontal regions of the brain, responsible for attention, concentration, and filtering out distractions. They measured different types of brain waves. As neuroscientist Susan Hillier explains in more detail, different brain waves reveal distinct mental states:"
Offices have shrunk since the pandemic as many staff now mix hybrid work from home and the office. On days when more staff are present, open-plan spaces can feel busier and noisier. A study fitted 26 adults with wireless electroencephalogram (EEG) headsets while they performed simulated office tasks such as monitoring notifications, reading and responding to emails, and memorising and recalling word lists. Participants completed tasks in an open-plan workspace and in a small enclosed glazed pod. The study measured frontal brain regions and different brain waves, linking gamma with focused concentration, beta with anxiety and external attention, and alpha with relaxed passive attention. Results show brains work harder in open-plan spaces than in private offices.
Read at The Independent
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