Employee experience teams across Baton Rouge are restructuring how they think about workplace productivity, as a growing body of research quantifies the impact of environmental quality, air cleanliness, and hygiene conditions on cognitive performance, absenteeism, and operational effectiveness. While companies traditionally treated office cleaning as a basic operational necessity, recent studies indicate that variations in cleanliness correlate with measurable differences in employee output, attendance, and satisfaction.
They tracked 54 women aged 18 to 40 not using hormone-based contraception and grouped them according to how much exercise they took: inactive (reported not taking part in any form of structured exercise), recreationally active (taking part in at least two hours of structured exercise a week), competing in any sport at club level, and elite (competing in any sport at national or international level).
The researchers analyzed the results of over 100,000 oral exams conducted at an Italian university and found a clear bell curve in pass rates that peaked at noon, regardless of the test taker's chronotype. (More on that in a moment.) Between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. is the sweet spot; any earlier or later and the chances of passing significantly decreased. In fact, the earlier or later in the day students took a test, the less likely they were to pass.