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Decision made, good feelings fade? How noise and multitasking affect decision confidence and well-being.

Marc SyndicusBettina S Wiese
Published in: International journal of occupational safety and ergonomics : JOSE (2024)
Objectives. This study aimed to examine the influence of office noise and multitasking on decision confidence, overconfidence, satisfaction, calibration and affective well-being. Detrimental effects of noise and multitasking on perceived annoyance and concentration are well documented. Little is known about whether decision confidence and well-being during decisions are also affected. Methods. The study was a between-subjects laboratory experiment ( n  = 109) involving a noise condition with office noise presented through headphones ( A -weighted equivalent sound pressure level of L A eq  = 60 dB), a multitasking condition with an email-sorting task as the primary task and a control condition. Results. Compared to the control condition, subjects in the noise and multitasking conditions exhibited overestimation of confidence . There was also a significant decrease in well-being for people in the noise condition. Calibration was not affected. Conclusion. In the case of noise, well-being is affected even before the thresholds of workplace legislation are reached. Undue overconfidence can have detrimental effects upon subsequent decisions and risk-taking. Findings suggest that there should be greater consideration of environmental influences during decision-making in work environments.
Keyphrases
  • air pollution
  • decision making
  • physical activity
  • depressive symptoms
  • computed tomography
  • bipolar disorder
  • climate change
  • social support