Labonte-LeMoyne et al. (2020)
LJLSFBM20.Rd
Perceived performance for standing desk (relative to sitting desk) measured from questionnaires and obtained from electroencephalograph (EEG) data.
Format
A data frame with 296 rows and 14 variables:
id
[factor] participant identifier
order
[integer] order in which tasks were performed, termed "fatigue" in the paper
position
[factor] work position, either
standing
orsitting
phys_demand
[factor] manipulation using either
mouse
ortouchpad
task_diff
[factor] task difficulty, either
easy
ordifficult
ies
[double] inverse efficiency score global stimulus
central_alpha
[double] alpha for central region
parietal_alpha
[double] alpha for parietal region
central_beta
[double] beta for central region
parietal_beta
[double] alpha for parietal region
bmi
[double] body mass index
sex
[factor] sex, either
man
orwoman
attention
[double] attention scale, average of 6 items
satisfaction
[double] satisfaction score, a scale composed of 3 items
References
Labonté-LeMoyne, E., Jutras, M.-A., Léger, P.-M., Sénécal, S., Fredette, M., Begon, M., and Mathieu, M.-E. (2020). Does Reducing Sedentarity With Standing Desks Hinder Cognitive Performance? Human Factors, 62(4), 603–612. doi:10.1177/0018720819879310