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Open-office noise and information processing

Lewend Mayiwar (Department of Leadership and Organizational Behaviour, BI Norwegian Business School, Oslo, Norway)
Thorvald Hærem (Department of Leadership and Organizational Behaviour, BI Norwegian Business School, Oslo, Norway)

Journal of Managerial Psychology

ISSN: 0268-3946

Article publication date: 31 July 2023

Issue publication date: 29 August 2023

417

Abstract

Purpose

The authors draw on arousal-based models to develop and test a model of open-office noise and information processing. Specifically, the authors examined whether open-office noise changes how people process information and whether such a change has consequences for task performance.

Design/methodology/approach

In a laboratory experiment, the authors randomly assigned participants (107 students at a business school) to either a silent condition or a condition that exposed them to open-office noise (irrelevant speech) while completing a task that requires cognitive flexibility. The authors measured participants' physiological arousal and the extent to which they processed information intuitively and analytically during the task.

Findings

Open-office noise increased urgent processing and decreased analytical processing, which led to a respective decrease and increase in task performance. In line with a neuroscientific account of cognitive processing, an increase in arousal (subjective and physiological) drove the detrimental effect of open-office noise on task performance.

Practical implications

Understanding the information-processing consequences of open-office noise can help managers make more informed decisions about workplace environments that facilitate performance.

Originality/value

The study is one of the first to examine the indirect effects of open-office noise on task performance through intuitive and analytical processing, while simultaneously testing and providing support for the accompanying physiological mechanism.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Arna Storm for the assistance in data collection, which was part of both Storm’s and the first author's MSc thesis.

Citation

Mayiwar, L. and Hærem, T. (2023), "Open-office noise and information processing", Journal of Managerial Psychology, Vol. 38 No. 6, pp. 404-418. https://doi.org/10.1108/JMP-03-2023-0140

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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