Sedentary Lifestyle Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effect of Alternating Postures on Cognitive Performance
Verified date | August 2016 |
Source | University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | Austria: Ethikkommission |
Study type | Interventional |
Prolonged sitting is a risk factor for cardiovascular and musculoskeletal diseases, diabetes, several types of cancer and all-cause mortality. In combination with static and awkward postures, the prevalence of musculoskeletal diseases can increase further. Although the implementation of sit-to-stand or active workstations can help to reduce sitting time, improve physical activity at work and promote health benefits, it might also lead to changes in cognitive functions such as productivity. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the short-term effect of alternating working postures on cognitive performance for healthy people.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 46 |
Est. completion date | March 2015 |
Est. primary completion date | March 2015 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 18 Years to 39 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Healthy Caucasian (no acute or chronic diseases) - Normal weight or overweight (BMI: 18.5 - 30.0 kg/m²) - Regular computer users - Fluent German speakers - Consented to participate Exclusion Criteria: - Obesity (BMI > 30.0 kg/m²) - Experience in sit-to-stand workstations - Acute or chronic diseases - Inability to stand - Visual impairments that had not been corrected - Color blindness - Regular heavy smokers (> 10 cigarettes /day) - Not consented to participate |
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Open Label
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Austria | University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria | Linz | Upper Austria |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria | University of Vienna |
Austria,
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Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Body movements | Body movements can alter physiological parameters and cognitive performance. Especially small movements during longer time intervals are very hard to classify by means of personal observations. Therefore, a three-dimensional accelerometer - placed on the sternum via a neoprene breast belt - was used to objectively measure body movements. Upper body placements of accelerometers have been shown to reliably detect body movements, and sit-to-stand as well as stand-to-sit transitions. To reduce the total number of sensors, a HRV-recorder with integrated 3D-accelerometer was used. | 2 experimental days | No |
Primary | Reaction time | Reaction time is a commonly measured parameter to describe mental states, fatigue or performance in ergonomic research. As the effect of alternating postures on reaction time is still unclear, a digital version of the Color-Word-Conflict-Stroop-Test has been implemented. It contained 190 congruent, incongruent and neutral tasks and required approximately 10 min to simulate long-lasting monotonous office screen work. The reaction time was measured and recorded automatically. Outliers (values outside of the limits of 3 standard deviations) have been automatically eliminated. The Stroop-Test is characterized by a high test-retest reliability. Due to the cross-over design of the study two days were necessary to determine the interventional effect. According to the group allocation the participants executed the Stroop-test either in an alternating or sitting posture. Differences in reaction time and accuracy between "alternating" and "sitting" days will be analyzed. |
2 experimental days | No |
Primary | Attentional performance | As the effect of alternating postures on attentional performance is still unclear, an attentional performance test called "d2R-test of attention" has been implemented. The d2R-test was executed as a pen and paper version. Therefore, it enabled screen breaks during the test protocol and simulated paper-related office work. The d2R-Test is characterized by a high test-retest reliability and do not require any specific previous knowledge except of rudimentary language skills. Normative values for the d2R-test are available for different countries. Attentional performance and accuracy were manually determined according to the d2R-guidelines. Due to the cross-over design of the study two days were necessary to determine the interventional effect. According to the group allocation the participants executed the d2R-test either in an alternating or sitting posture. Differences in attentional performance and accuracy between "alternating" and "sitting" days will be analyzed. |
2 experimental days | No |
Primary | Working speed | Physical efforts when performing standardized tests (e.g. standing or walking) can negatively influence cognitive parameters as well as working speed. To determine the effect of alternating postures on working speed a digital text editing task encouraging participants to fill in spaces in an ergonomic guideline text for 10 min was used. Working speed (words per minute) and accuracy (relative error) have been manually calculated. Due to the cross-over design of the study two days were necessary to determine the interventional effect. According to the group allocation the participants executed the text editing task either in an alternating or sitting posture. Differences in working speed between "alternating" and "sitting" days will be analyzed. |
2 experimental days | No |
Primary | Workload perception | Sit-to-stand workstations can evoke positive as well as negative associations. A common method to rate workload perception is the NASA-TLX questionnaire (Task Load Index, National Aeronautics and Space Administration). For reasons of simplicity and unmodified sensitivity, the short version of this questionnaire (RTLX, raw task load index), consisting of six major items, was used. Influences on workload perception based on unweighted items in the RTLX were negated due to the cross-over design. Due to the cross-over design of the study two days were necessary to determine the interventional effect. According to the group allocation the participants scored their perceived workload after executing several cognitive tests in an alternating or sitting posture. Differences in workload perception between "alternating" and "sitting" days will be analyzed. |
2 experimental days | No |
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