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Situations & Environment

Meeting Anxiety: Why Open Offices and Video Calls Make It Worse

Key Takeaways
  1. 1. Open Offices Create a Stage You Never Signed Up For

    • Removing walls didn't increase collaboration, it cut face-to-face interaction by 70%
    • Feeling watched at work triggers a low-grade anxiety that most people never name
    • The biggest complaint about open offices isn't noise, it's the loss of privacy
  2. 2. Video Calls Force Your Brain Into Overdrive

    • Video calls create fatigue through four mechanisms that don't exist in person
    • Seeing your own face on screen activates the same self-monitoring that drives anxiety
    • Turning cameras on significantly increases fatigue, especially for women and new employees
  3. 3. The “Always Available” Workplace Never Lets Your Stress Switch Off

    • The urge to respond immediately to messages predicts burnout and poor health
    • Checking email less frequently reduced stress as effectively as learning to relax
    • After an interruption, it takes an average of 23 minutes to fully refocus
References & Sources (14)

Every claim above is grounded in a primary source below, each one verified against academic citation databases and matched to what the study actually found.

  1. Bernstein, E.S. & Turban, S. (2018). The Impact of the 'Open' Workspace on Human Collaboration. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, 373(1753), 20170239.

    What we learned: Provided the strongest behavioral evidence that open offices reduce rather than increase collaboration, with sociometric badge data showing a ~70% drop in face-to-face interaction — the foundational finding for Section 1.

  2. Kim, J. & de Dear, R. (2013). Workspace Satisfaction: The Privacy-Communication Trade-off in Open-Plan Offices. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 36, 18-26.

    What we learned: Established through 42,764 surveys that acoustical privacy is the strongest driver of workspace dissatisfaction, revealing that being overheard matters more than noise itself.

  3. Brennan, A., Chugh, J.S., & Kline, T. (2002). Traditional Versus Open Office Design: A Longitudinal Field Study. Environment and Behavior, 34(3), 279-299.

    What we learned: Provided the longitudinal evidence that workers do not habituate to open offices — stress and dissatisfaction persist months after transition, countering the common assumption that people will adapt.

  4. Cottrell, N.B. (1972). Social Facilitation. In C.G. McClintock (Ed.), Experimental Social Psychology.

    What we learned: Established the evaluation apprehension framework distinguishing anxiety from evaluative audiences versus mere social presence — the theoretical foundation for why open offices trigger performance anxiety.

  5. Hedge, A. (1982). The Open-Plan Office: A Systematic Investigation of Employee Reactions to Their Work Environment. Environment and Behavior, 14(5), 519-542.

    What we learned: Early foundational study identifying 'feeling exposed' as a primary complaint in open offices, with trait anxiety predicting stronger negative reactions.

  6. Bailenson, J.N. (2021). Nonverbal Overload: A Theoretical Argument for the Causes of Zoom Fatigue. Technology, Mind, and Behavior, 2(1).

    What we learned: Provided the four-mechanism taxonomy of video call fatigue (proxemics overload, cognitive load, mobility restriction, mirror anxiety) that structures Section 2's analysis.

  7. Ratan, R., Miller, D.B., & Bailenson, J.N. (2022). Facial Appearance Dissatisfaction Explains Differences in Zoom Fatigue. Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking, 25(2), 124-129.

    What we learned: Demonstrated that hiding self-view reduces fatigue specifically for people with appearance concerns — providing the evidence base for the practical recommendation to turn off self-view.

  8. Shockley, K.M., Gabriel, A.S., Robertson, D., Rosen, C.C., Chawla, N., Ganster, M.L., & Ezerins, M.E. (2021). The Fatiguing Effects of Camera Use in Virtual Meetings: A Within-Person Field Experiment. Journal of Applied Psychology, 106(8), 1137-1155.

    What we learned: Provided the strongest causal evidence for camera-on fatigue through a within-person design (1,408 observations), showing the effect is moderated by gender and organizational tenure.

  9. Barber, L.K. & Santuzzi, A.M. (2015). Please Respond ASAP: Workplace Telepressure and Employee Recovery. Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 20(2), 172-189.

    What we learned: Introduced the telepressure construct and demonstrated it predicts burnout independently of workload — the key concept underlying Section 3's argument about always-on communication.

  10. Kushlev, K. & Dunn, E.W. (2015). Checking Email Less Frequently Reduces Stress. Computers in Human Behavior, 43, 220-228.

    What we learned: Provided randomized experimental evidence that limiting email checking reduces daily stress by an amount comparable to relaxation techniques — demonstrating the behavior itself generates stress.

  11. Mark, G., Gudith, D., & Klocke, U. (2008). The Cost of Interrupted Work: More Speed and Stress. Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 107-110.

    What we learned: Quantified the 23-minute recovery cost of digital interruptions with measured increases in stress and cognitive load — the empirical anchor for the interruption argument.

  12. Luong, A. & Rogelberg, S.G. (2005). Meetings and More Meetings: The Relationship Between Meeting Load and the Daily Well-Being of Employees. Group Dynamics: Theory, Research, and Practice, 9(1), 58-67.

    What we learned: Showed that meeting accumulation predicts fatigue regardless of individual meeting quality, supporting the argument that volume of social performance demands compounds over a workday.

  13. Perlow, L.A. (2012). Sleeping with Your Smartphone: How to Break the 24/7 Habit and Change the Way You Work. Harvard Business Review Press.

    What we learned: Documented the self-reinforcing 'cycle of responsiveness' in always-on workplaces and provided evidence that 'predictable time off' interventions reduce stress — the key structural solution cited.

  14. Zajonc, R.B. (1965). Social Facilitation. Science, 149(3681), 269-274.

    What we learned: Established the foundational social facilitation effect (mere presence increases arousal), which Cottrell later refined to show that evaluative potential, not mere presence, drives anxiety — a distinction critical to understanding why open offices are stressful.

Open Offices Create a Stage You Never Signed Up For

When researchers tracked what actually happened after two major companies tore down their walls and moved to open-plan offices, they found something the architects hadn't planned for. Face-to-face conversation dropped by roughly 70%. Email and instant messaging surged. People didn't become more collaborative. They put on headphones, stared at screens, and found new ways to create invisible walls. The transparency that was supposed to bring people together pushed them apart. When you can be seen by everyone, all day, the instinct isn't to open up. It's to hide in plain sight.

The reason runs deeper than preference. When other people can observe and evaluate you, your brain shifts into performance mode. Psychologists have studied this for decades: the simple presence of an evaluative audience increases arousal, self-consciousness, and anxiety. In a private office or cubicle, you get breaks from that audience. In an open plan, you don't. An analysis of nearly 43,000 workspace surveys found that sound privacy was the most critical factor in satisfaction. People were more bothered by being overheard than by hearing others. And longitudinal research tracking workers who moved into open offices found they didn't adapt. Months later, they were still more stressed.

Not everyone struggles equally. If you're naturally at ease around people, an open office might not faze you at all. But if social situations already carry a charge for you, the open plan amplifies it. You're dealing with a low-level audience effect that never switches off. The brave thing here isn't to pretend it doesn't bother you. It's to name what's happening and make changes where you can: a quiet corner for focused work, a meeting room when you need a break from visibility, or simply acknowledging that your need for privacy is legitimate and backed by substantial research.

Video Calls Force Your Brain Into Overdrive

A Stanford researcher identified four reasons video calls are more draining than in-person meetings, and none of them are about how long the meeting runs. First, the faces on screen appear at unnaturally close distance, the kind of proximity your brain reserves for intimate relationships, not work conversations. Second, you have to consciously manage nonverbal cues that are normally automatic: keeping your gaze centered, nodding visibly, maintaining an attentive expression. Third, you're physically locked in place, anchored to the camera frame. And fourth, the one that matters most for anxiety: you can see your own face the entire time.

That last point deserves attention. A study of over 10,500 participants found that mirror anxiety, the stress of watching yourself on screen, was a significant predictor of video call exhaustion. Women reported 13.8% more Zoom fatigue than men. People dissatisfied with their appearance experienced more fatigue, and hiding self-view reduced it. In a field experiment with 103 employees tracked over four weeks, turning the camera on significantly increased fatigue compared to camera-off meetings. The effect was strongest for women and newer employees. The mechanism isn't vanity. It's self-focused attention: the continuous monitoring of "how do I look right now" that anxiety researchers have identified as one of the core processes keeping anxiety alive.

Most of this research emerged between 2020 and 2022, so the science is still maturing. But findings are consistent across multiple studies and thousands of participants. If video calls exhaust you in a way that phone calls or in-person meetings don't, you're experiencing something real. One concrete step the research supports: hide your self-view. You don't need to see your own face to have a conversation, and removing that mirror disrupts the self-monitoring loop. It takes courage to turn off your camera or push back on always-on policies. But the evidence suggests your exhaustion isn't about work ethic. It's about cognitive load that didn't exist ten years ago.

The “Always Available” Workplace Never Lets Your Stress Switch Off

Researchers gave it a name: telepressure. It's the urge to respond immediately to work messages, and it operates independently of how much work you actually have. You could have a manageable workload and still feel that spike of tension when a notification appears. A study that measured telepressure across hundreds of workers found it predicted burnout, worse physical health, and the inability to psychologically detach from work, even after accounting for how demanding the job itself was. For people with social anxiety, each notification carries an extra layer: not just "I need to respond" but "Was my last message okay?"

What happens when you break the cycle? A randomized experiment assigned some participants to check email only three times a day, while others checked as usual. The limited group reported significantly lower daily stress, a reduction comparable to practicing relaxation techniques. Other research found that after a digital interruption, people need an average of 23 minutes to return to their original task, and they do so with measurably higher stress and mental load. Even meetings that feel productive contribute to fatigue when they pile up. Research on meeting load found that accumulated meetings predicted lower well-being regardless of whether individual meetings were considered effective.

The deeper pattern is that these three forces, the open office, the video call, the always-on channel, don't operate in isolation. They compound. A modern worker might spend the morning visible to dozens of colleagues, the afternoon on back-to-back video calls, and the evening fielding messages from the couch. Each one is manageable alone. Together, they create an ambient social evaluation pressure that didn't exist a generation ago. Research suggests structural solutions work: designated quiet hours, explicit norms around response times, and scheduled periods of uninterrupted work. The courage here isn't about pushing through. It's about recognizing that your nervous system is responding rationally to an irrational amount of social exposure, and choosing to set boundaries that protect your ability to recover.

This is educational content, not medical advice. It is not a substitute for care from a qualified professional.

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