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| A study of some 800 workers in the UK, conducted by HP with the help of The Mind Lab, compared working environments to see what impact it made upon productivity and health. The experiment was headed up by cognitive neuropsychologist Dr David Lewis, and involved the creation of a 'battery office' which simulated an environment where employees had to work using older IT equipment including slow PCs and bulky CRT monitors in small, cluttered spaces, and a 'free-range office' which gave workers the space and technology to have far greater freedoms about how and when they worked. "On every measure from memory to IQ to the speed with which new information was processed, the battery office produced a marked decrease in intellectual performance combined with a sharp increase in stress levels," comments The Mind Lab research director neuropsychologist Dr David Lewis. "The study clearly shows that restrictive working conditions are not just bad for employees, they are also very bad for business." The tests proved that volunteer workers could suffer from increased stress, diminished IQ and the reduced ability to retain and process information if they spent long periods of time at their desks. The same workers were then given HP mobility technology to work in a more 'free-range' style and experienced a significant improvement in their well being as well as seeing their productivity rise by up by 400 percent.
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