Sleep Patterns and Sleep Alignment in Remote Teams during COVID-19

Working remotely from home during the COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in significant shifts and disruptions in the personal and work lives of millions of information workers and their teams. We examined how sleep patterns---an important component of mental and physical health---relates to teamwork. W...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the ACM on human-computer interaction 2022-11, Vol.6 (CSCW2), p.1-31, Article 326
Hauptverfasser: Breideband, Thomas, Martinez, Gonzalo J., Talkad Sukumar, Poorna, Caruso, Megan, D'Mello, Sidney, Striegel, Aaron D., Mark, Gloria
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container_issue CSCW2
container_start_page 1
container_title Proceedings of the ACM on human-computer interaction
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creator Breideband, Thomas
Martinez, Gonzalo J.
Talkad Sukumar, Poorna
Caruso, Megan
D'Mello, Sidney
Striegel, Aaron D.
Mark, Gloria
description Working remotely from home during the COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in significant shifts and disruptions in the personal and work lives of millions of information workers and their teams. We examined how sleep patterns---an important component of mental and physical health---relates to teamwork. We used wearable sensing and daily questionnaires to examine sleep patterns, affect, and perceptions of teamwork in 71 information workers from 22 teams over a ten-week period. Participants reported delays in sleep onset and offset as well as longer sleep duration during the pandemic. A similar shift was found in work schedules, though total work hours did not change significantly. Surprisingly, we found that more sleep was negatively related to positive affect, perceptions of teamwork, and perceptions of team productivity. However, a greater misalignment in the sleep patterns of members in a team predicted positive affect and teamwork after accounting for individual differences in sleep preferences. A follow-up analysis of exit interviews with participants revealed team-working conventions and collaborative mindsets as prominent themes that might help explain some of the ways that misalignment in sleep can affect teamwork. We discuss implications of sleep and sleep misalignment in work-from-home contexts with an eye towards leveraging sleep data to facilitate remote teamwork.
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subjects Applied computing
Human computer interaction (HCI)
Human-centered computing
Law, social and behavioral sciences
Psychology
title Sleep Patterns and Sleep Alignment in Remote Teams during COVID-19
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