Abstract
Occupational stress is universally experienced and is emerging as a
major risk factor for physical and mental illness and a key factor in poor work
performance and low job satisfaction. However, the technology does not
currently exist to unobtrusively measure occupational stress in real-time.
Here, we describe the design and clinical validation of an automated
high-definition thermal imaging system that can be used to quantify human
stress, remotely and instantaneously. Healthy human subjects underwent a
computer-based version of the Stroop-color conflict test, which is a validated
stress provocation test, in an experimental office facility. In separate
experiments, the same subjects completed a mental arithmetic challenge. The
thermal signal associated with stress provocation is near-instantaneous
corrugator warming. The stress response was detected in all subjects for all
stress-events compared to the respective baselines. Furthermore, there was
remarkable inter-individual preservation of the corrugator signal with stress
(
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