The effect of using a cycling workstation on mouse dexterity.

This study investigated the effect of using a cycling workstation on mouse dexterity, including if and how this changed with practice. Thirty-four healthy adults were allocated to a sitting group (n = 17) or cycling group (n = 17). All participants completed standardised computer tasks on 6 occasion...

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Main Authors: Anna Anderson, Oliver Thornton, Rachel Coats, Antonio Capozio, Sarah Astill
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220896
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spelling doaj-09cf339dfd8443edb5f886c242869cd52021-03-04T12:43:54ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01148e022089610.1371/journal.pone.0220896The effect of using a cycling workstation on mouse dexterity.Anna AndersonOliver ThorntonRachel CoatsAntonio CapozioSarah AstillThis study investigated the effect of using a cycling workstation on mouse dexterity, including if and how this changed with practice. Thirty-four healthy adults were allocated to a sitting group (n = 17) or cycling group (n = 17). All participants completed standardised computer tasks on 6 occasions: baseline and final-all participants were seated; practice 1 to 4-sitting group participants were seated, cycling group participants pedalled on an under desk cycle. Three computer tasks were employed: (1) Tracking (continuous task)-participants used the mouse pointer to track a dot in a figure of 8 pattern at 3 different speeds without a guide then with a guide (2) Aiming (discrete task)-participants moved the mouse pointer to a dot which repeatedly disappeared then reappeared again in different locations, creating the outline of a pentagram (3) Steering (continuous task)-participants steered the mouse pointer around two different pathways. Accuracy was measured during the Tracking and Steering tasks as the root mean square error and penalised path accuracy respectively. Speed was measured during the Aiming task as the movement time. Data was analysed using frequentist and Bayes Factor analyses. During the continuous tasks (Tracking and Steering), accuracy was impaired among participants using the cycling workstation, both compared to their accuracy when seated and to the accuracy of participants in the sitting group. In contrast, no deficits in speed were noted among participants using the cycling work station during the discrete task (Aiming). No learning effects were observed among either group for any tasks. These findings suggest using a cycling workstation may impair the accuracy but not speed of mouse use, regardless of task practice. Overall this supports the implementation of cycling workstations in typical office settings, but suggests cycling workstations may impair productivity among workers performing high precision mouse tasks.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220896
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anna Anderson
Oliver Thornton
Rachel Coats
Antonio Capozio
Sarah Astill
spellingShingle Anna Anderson
Oliver Thornton
Rachel Coats
Antonio Capozio
Sarah Astill
The effect of using a cycling workstation on mouse dexterity.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Anna Anderson
Oliver Thornton
Rachel Coats
Antonio Capozio
Sarah Astill
author_sort Anna Anderson
title The effect of using a cycling workstation on mouse dexterity.
title_short The effect of using a cycling workstation on mouse dexterity.
title_full The effect of using a cycling workstation on mouse dexterity.
title_fullStr The effect of using a cycling workstation on mouse dexterity.
title_full_unstemmed The effect of using a cycling workstation on mouse dexterity.
title_sort effect of using a cycling workstation on mouse dexterity.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description This study investigated the effect of using a cycling workstation on mouse dexterity, including if and how this changed with practice. Thirty-four healthy adults were allocated to a sitting group (n = 17) or cycling group (n = 17). All participants completed standardised computer tasks on 6 occasions: baseline and final-all participants were seated; practice 1 to 4-sitting group participants were seated, cycling group participants pedalled on an under desk cycle. Three computer tasks were employed: (1) Tracking (continuous task)-participants used the mouse pointer to track a dot in a figure of 8 pattern at 3 different speeds without a guide then with a guide (2) Aiming (discrete task)-participants moved the mouse pointer to a dot which repeatedly disappeared then reappeared again in different locations, creating the outline of a pentagram (3) Steering (continuous task)-participants steered the mouse pointer around two different pathways. Accuracy was measured during the Tracking and Steering tasks as the root mean square error and penalised path accuracy respectively. Speed was measured during the Aiming task as the movement time. Data was analysed using frequentist and Bayes Factor analyses. During the continuous tasks (Tracking and Steering), accuracy was impaired among participants using the cycling workstation, both compared to their accuracy when seated and to the accuracy of participants in the sitting group. In contrast, no deficits in speed were noted among participants using the cycling work station during the discrete task (Aiming). No learning effects were observed among either group for any tasks. These findings suggest using a cycling workstation may impair the accuracy but not speed of mouse use, regardless of task practice. Overall this supports the implementation of cycling workstations in typical office settings, but suggests cycling workstations may impair productivity among workers performing high precision mouse tasks.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220896
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