Flexibility Versus Routineness in Multimodal Health Indicators: A Sensor-based Longitudinal in Situ Study of Information Workers

Author:

Amon Mary Jean1ORCID,Mattingly Stephen2,Necaise Aaron1,Mark Gloria3,Chawla Nitesh2,Dey Anind4,D'mello Sidney5

Affiliation:

1. University of Central Florida, School of Modeling, Simulation, and Training, Orlando, Fl, USA

2. University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, USA

3. University of California Irvine, Irvine, California, USA

4. University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA

5. University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO, USA

Abstract

Although some research highlights the benefits of behavioral routines for individual functioning, other research indicates that routines can reflect an individual's inflexibility and lower well-being. Given conflicting accounts on the benefits of routine, research is needed to examine how routineness versus flexibility in health-related behaviors correspond to personality traits, health, and occupational outcomes. We adopt a nonlinear dynamical systems approach to understanding routine using automatically sensed health-related behaviors collected from 483 information workers over a roughly two-month period. We utilized multidimensional recurrence quantification analysis to derive a measure of health regularity (routineness) from measures of daily step count, sleep duration, and heart rate variability (which relates to stress). Participants also completed measures of personality, health, and job performance at the start of the study and for two months via Ecological Momentary Assessments. Greater regularity was associated with higher neuroticism, lower agreeableness, and greater interpersonal and organizational deviance. Importantly, these results were independent of overall levels of each health indicator in addition to demographics. It is often believed that routine is desirable, but the results suggest that associations with routineness are more nuanced, and wearable sensors can provide insights into beneficial health behaviors.

Funder

Office of the Director of National Intelligence

Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Health Information Management,Health Informatics,Computer Science Applications,Biomedical Engineering,Information Systems,Medicine (miscellaneous),Software

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4. Effect of Missing Inter-Beat Interval Data on Heart Rate Variability Analysis Using Wrist-Worn Wearables

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