New research finds that women are more than twice as likely to experience stress from video calls than men. We dig into the reasons for this gender gap and suggest what to do better
One of Covid’s many unprecedented effects has been to thrust workers into the camera’s focus. We’ve found ourselves on video calls, sometimes for hours a day, watching—and being watched—during virtual meetings, conferences and team happy hours.
Unflattering angles and awkward interruptions have ensued. So, too, has ‘Zoom fatigue’, which entered the lexicon over the past year to describe a uniquely debilitating sense of exhaustion and anxiety (you know it when you feel it).
Jeremy Bailenson, founding director of Stanford University’s Virtual Human Interaction Lab, was quick to diagnose some of the problems last April in a Wall Street Journal op-ed. He described video calls as unnatural, with a forced gaze that is draining and large faces on screen that can trigger our evolutionary ‘fight or flight’ reflex.
“Behavior ordinarily reserved for close relationships—such as long stretches of direct eye gaze and faces seen close up—has suddenly become the way we interact with casual acquaintances, co-workers and even strangers,” Bailenson wrote.
To measure this impact more precisely, Bailenson created a Zoom Exhaustion and Fatigue (ZEF) scale along with researchers Géraldine Fauville and Jeffery Hancock. Through survey questions that you can take yourself, ZEF tracks five types of fatigue associated with video calls: general tiredness, social, emotional, visual strain and motivational.
The results of the latest survey, completed by 10,591 participants, show that women of all ages scored higher on all five types of fatigue. Nearly 14 percent of women report feeling “very” to “extremely” fatigued after video conference calls, compared to only 5.5 percent of men. Women also have longer meetings with shorter breaks and report feeling physically trapped by video calls more than men do.
See also: How To Cope With Stress And Anxiety During Covid-19