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A study of brainwave activity conducted by Microsoft among people participating in video meetings while wearing (EEG) equipment to monitor the electrical activity in their brains revealed that ...
So before we all lose more hours and days in brain or butt-numbing virtual meetings, let’s at least try to zoom in on a few of these basics, before zooming out on one another again.
New research suggests sleepiness during virtual meetings is caused by mental underload and boredom. Earlier studies suggested that fatigue from virtual meetings stems from mental overload, but new ...
Virtual meetings' impact on brain activity the subject of new research The Yale study found brain activity decreases in virtual settings compared to in-person encounters.
New research suggests sleepiness during virtual meetings is caused by mental underload and boredom. Earlier studies suggested that fatigue from virtual meetings stems from mental overload, but new ...
New research using sophisticated imaging tools found that the brain activity of people engaged in conversation looks different from that of two people conversing on Zoom.
Can you figure out what the fifth man is doing? Here's how people reacted to this brain teaser: As soon as this brain teaser was posted, the puzzle started getting lots of attention.
Microsoft’s research confirms that back-to-back meetings create stress and sap productivity. So it’s adding features to carve off some downtime.
A study by scientists at Yale and University College London compared brain activity and other physical responses during virtual meetings versus in-person ones.
Microsoft on Tuesday published research confirming that back-to-back virtual meetings can make you stressed and distracted at work. For the study, researchers at Microsoft asked 14 people to take ...