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Cycling to work can beat stress and improve work performance!

A new study suggests that cycling to office daily not only make you healthier, but also helps to reduce stress and improve your work performance.

Cycling to work can beat stress and improve work performance! Image for representational purpose only

Washington DC: Want to reduce your stress level? If yes, then cycling to work instead of driving a car.

A new study suggests that cycling to office daily not only make you healthier, but also helps to reduce stress and improve your work performance.

Researchers Stephane Brutus, Roshan Javadian and Alexandra Panaccio compared how different modes of commuting - cycling, driving a car and taking public transport - affected stress and mood at work.

Brutus, the lead author said, the results indicate that cycling to work is a good way to have a good day.

He says,“Employees who cycled to work showed significantly lower levels of stress within the first 45 minutes of work than those who travelled by car.”

The study did not, however, find any difference in the effect on mood.

For the finding, the research team collected data from 123 employees at Autodesk, an information technology company in Old Montreal, using a web-based survey.

Respondents replied to questions about their mood, perceived commuting stress and mode of travel.

The survey differentiated between perceived stress and mood, a more transient state affected by personality traits and emotions.

The study only assessed answers from respondents who had completed the questionnaire within 45 minutes of arriving at work.

This was done to get a more ‘in-the-moment’ assessment of employees’ stress and mood.

Brutus notes that this time specification was the study’s major innovation.

He explains,“Recent research has shown that early morning stress and mood are strong predictors of their effect later in the day”.

He added,“They can shape how subsequent events are perceived, interpreted and acted upon for the rest of the day.”

He said that the time specification ensured a more precise picture of stress upon arrival at work. Retrospective assessments can be coloured by stressors that occur later in the workday.

“There are relatively few studies that compare the affective experiences of cyclists with those of car and public transport users,” says Brutus, an avid cyclist himself.

He said,“Our study was an attempt to address that gap.”

At the same time, the team confirmed previous research that found that cyclists perceived their commute as being less stressful than those who travelled by car.

(With ANI inputs)