PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Walking workstations improve physical and mental health, builds healthier workplace

Walking workstations improve physical and mental health, builds healthier workplace
2014-10-29
(Press-News.org) Walking workstations can improve not only physical, but also mental health during the workday, a new study released this week found. The research was conducted by faculty and student researchers from the Department of Psychology in the School of Science at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI).

With growing concerns regarding obesity in the United States, Michael Sliter, assistant professor of psychology, hopes the study encourages employers to examine methods to assist workers in in healthy living.

"We found that the walking workstations, regardless of a person's exercise habits or body mass index (BMI), had significant benefits," Sliter said. "Even if you don't exercise or if you are overweight, you'll experience both short-term physical and psychological benefits."

A sample of 180 participants were evaluated on boredom, task satisfaction, stress, arousal, and performance while completing work-related computer tasks across four randomly assigned workstations: seated, standing, cycling or walking.

The researchers found walking workstation participants had higher satisfaction and arousal, while experiencing less boredom and stress than the standing and sitting workstation participants. In comparison, the cycling workstation related to reduced satisfaction and performance.

The paper "Workout at work: Laboratory Test of Psychological and Performance Outcomes of Active Workstations," which Sliter wrote entirely while using a walking workstation, appears online in the American Psychological Association's Journal of Occupational Health Psychology and in the January 2015 print edition.

Sliter plans to continue exploring the psychological benefits of walking workstations in future studies. Particularly, he is interested in examining long-term psychological and physical benefits of such workstations.

INFORMATION: The School of Science at IUPUI is committed to excellence in teaching, research and service in the biological, physical, behavioral and mathematical sciences. The school is dedicated to being a leading resource for interdisciplinary research and science education in support of Indiana's effort to expand and diversify its economy.

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Walking workstations improve physical and mental health, builds healthier workplace Walking workstations improve physical and mental health, builds healthier workplace 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Go straight and publish: From Barcode of Life Data Systems to scholarly publishing systems

Go straight and publish: From Barcode of Life Data Systems to scholarly publishing systems
2014-10-29
An innovative workflow reveals new research potential of the Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLD). A recently published article in the Biodiversity Data Journal (BDJ) used specimen records downloaded from BOLD in tabular format and imported these into a human-readable text developed in manuscript within the Pensoft Writting Tool (PWT). Data were used to study the species distributions of ten Nearctic species of braconid wasps from the Microgastrinae subfamily. BOLD is originally designed to support the generation and application of DNA barcode data. However, the repository ...

Saving lots of computing capacity with a new algorithm

2014-10-29
The control of modern infrastructure such as intelligent power grids needs lots of computing capacity. Scientists of the Interdisciplinary Centre for Security, Reliability and Trust (SnT) at the University of Luxembourg have developed an algorithm that might revolutionise these processes. With their new software the SnT researchers are able to forego the use of considerable amounts of computing capacity, enabling what they call micro mining. Their achievements, which the team headed by Prof. Yves Le Traon published in the International Conference on Software Engineering ...

NYU research: Tourism as a driver of illicit drug use, HIV risk in the DR

2014-10-29
The Caribbean has the second highest global human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) prevalence in the world outside of Sub-Saharan Africa, with HIV/AIDS as leading cause of death among people aged 20–59 years within the region. Particularly hard-hit are the Dominican Republic (DR) and Haiti, on the island of Hispaniola, accounting for approximately 70% of all people living with HIV in the Caribbean region. Insufficient attention has been paid to the intersection of drugs and tourism as contributing factors for the region's elevated HIV/AIDS risk. Caribbean studies ...

Prenatal phthalate exposures and anogenital distance in Swedish boys

2014-10-29
The first study to examine prenatal exposure to the phthalate DiNP finds it is associated with a shorter anogenital distance (AGD) in Swedish boys at the age of 21 months. These findings raise concern since animal research has linked DiNP exposure to a shorter AGD, and studies on humans have related shorter AGD to male genital birth defects as well as impaired reproductive function in adult males, and the levels of DiNP metabolites in humans are increasing globally. Background Phthalates are used as plasticizers in soft polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and found in a large ...

Largest ever dataset of individual deaths in Africa & SE Asia reveals changing health

2014-10-29
More than 110,000 individual deaths and their causes across 13 countries, including Ghana, South Africa, Kenya, Bangladesh and Vietnam, are contained in the new INDEPTH dataset. The data, collected by hundreds of researchers over two decades, are the first meaningful community-based information about cause of death in countries where individual deaths are not recorded automatically by national governments. The INDEPTH cause of death findings are published in a special issue of the journal Global Health Action, which is fully open access. There are six multisite papers ...

Aortic valve replacement appears safe, effective in very elderly patients

2014-10-29
Chicago, October 29, 2014 – Aortic valve replacement (AVR) can safely be used to treat severe aortic stenosis in patients age 90 years and older and is associated with a low risk of operative stroke and mortality, according to a study in the November 2014 issue of The Annals of Thoracic Surgery. Key points Aortic valve replacement appears to be safe and effective for patients over age 90 years with severe aortic stenosis. Four out of five (81.3%) patients were alive 1 year following AVR. TAVR had similar rates of morbidity and mortality as traditional surgical ...

Support for fecal testing in familial colorectal cancer screening

2014-10-29
Bethesda, MD (Oct. 29, 2014) — Fecal immunochemical tests (FIT) may be as effective as colonoscopies when it comes to detecting colorectal cancer among first-degree relatives of patients with colorectal cancer, according to a new study in Gastroenterology1, the official journal of the American Gastroenterological Association. "In our study, repeat FIT screening detected all colorectal cancers in asymptomatic first-degree relatives of patients with colorectal cancer," said lead study authors Enrique Quintero, MD, PhD, and Marta Carrillo, MD, from Hospital Universitario ...

Georgia Tech releases 2015 Emerging Cyber Threats Report

2014-10-29
In its latest Emerging Cyber Threats Report, Georgia Tech warns about loss of privacy; abuse of trust between users and machines; attacks against the mobile ecosystem; rogue insiders; and the increasing involvement of cyberspace in nation-state conflicts. Such topics are discussed at length in the annual report, which is published by the Georgia Tech Information Security Center (GTISC) and the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI). The report will be released this week at the 12th Georgia Tech Cyber Security Summit (GT CSS), which has become the Atlanta IT community's ...

New technology shows promise for delivery of therapeutics to the brain

New technology shows promise for delivery of therapeutics to the brain
2014-10-29
A new technology that may assist in the treatment of brain cancer and other neurological diseases is the subject of an article in a recent issue of the journal Technology, published by World Scientific Publishing Company. According to the authors, the current medical use of chemotherapy to treat brain cancer can be inefficient because of the blood-brain-barrier that impedes the delivery of drugs out of blood vessels and into the tumor. The researchers from the Virginia Tech – Wake Forest University School of Biomedical Engineering and Sciences described in their ...

Smoke and haze over China

Smoke and haze over China
2014-10-29
Smoke and haze hang over a large portion of eastern China in this image captured by the Aqua satellite on October 29, 2014. China uses the method of "slash and burn" agriculture to rid their fields of leftover plants. Farmers often use fire to return nutrients to the soil and to clear the ground of unwanted plants. While fire helps enhance crops and grasses for pasture, the fires also produce smoke that degrades air quality as seen in this image. The U.S. Consulate in Beijing records an air quality index of 226 for October 29 putting it in the "Very Unhealthy" region. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Research quantifies “gap” in carbon removal for first time

Study: ChatGPT displays lower concern for child development “warning signs” than physicians

Study: Childcare is unaffordable for U.S. medical residents

Study: New approach to equitable social care connects pediatric caregivers to resources without screening

Study: Rural children struggle to access hospital services

Study: Longer use of breathing device supports lung growth in preterm infants

Study: Newborn umbilical cord procedure safe for long-term neurodevelopment in children

Study: Eye ultrasounds may assist with detecting brain shunt failure in children

Study: Children with hypertension at higher long-term risk for serious heart conditions

Study: Rotavirus vaccinations in NICU pose minimal risk

Study: Long COVID symptoms in children vary by age

Study: Multicomponent intravenous lipid emulsion improves brain development in preterm infants

PAS 2024: Nemours Children’s Health researchers to present on youth mental health, vaccination, autism and respiratory illness

Lake tsunamis pose significant threat under warming climate

New Nevada experiments will improve monitoring of nuclear explosions

New study challenges one-size-fits-all approach to vitamin D supplementation guidelines

MBL Director Nipam Patel elected to National Academy of Sciences

The future of digital agriculture

Lahar detection system upgraded for mount rainier

NCSA's Bill Gropp elected to AAAS Council

George Mason University receives over $1.1 million to revolutionize Lyme disease testing

NASA selects BAE systems to develop air quality instrument for NOAA

For microscopic organisms, ocean currents act as 'expressway' to deeper depths, study finds

Rice’s Harvey, Ramesh named to National Academy of Sciences

Oil palm plantations are driving massive downstream impact to watershed

Nanotubes, nanoparticles, and antibodies detect tiny amounts of fentanyl

New eco-friendly lubricant additives protect turbine equipment, waterways

Monoclonal Antibodies in Immunodiagnosis and Immunotherapy appoints new Deputy Editor-in-Chief, Andrei Moroz, PhD

Optical pumped magnetometer magnetocardiography as a potential method of therapy monitoring in fulminant myocarditis

Heart failure registries in Asia – what have we learned?

[Press-News.org] Walking workstations improve physical and mental health, builds healthier workplace