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Zoom fatigue is real and even worse for women. Stanford researchers explain why
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In this file photo illustration taken on March 29, 2020, Zoom app logo is displayed on a smartphone on March 30, 2020, in Arlington, Virginia. In the first large-scale paper analyzing Zoom fatigue, Stanford researchers found that feelings of exhaustion particular to long spans of time on Zoom is more severe for women than for men.OLIVIER DOULIERY / AFP via Getty Images
Zoom fatigue is real but it’s even more acute and intense for women, new research from Stanford shows.
In the first large-scale paper analyzing Zoom fatigue, Stanford researchers found that feelings of exhaustion following long spans of time spent on Zoom calls are more severe for women than for men.
| UPDATED: 16:24, Sun, Mar 14, 2021
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Earlier this week, Professor David Blake urged Boris Johnson to hit back against the EU by imposing penalties on its goods of up to £90billion. His comments, made to this website, came after he claimed the euro is “undervalued against sterling on what economists call a purchasing power parity (PPP) basis by up to 20 percent”.
“It exploited every weakness we had to its advantage. For example, we had to trade off fishing for energy security, such is our dependence on electricity from the EU.
“It is time for the government to wake up and ensure that we have sufficient manufacturing capabilities to give us sufficient defence and energy security and resilience in the future.
“It also needs to introduce measures to counteract the structural undervaluation of the euro which has done so much damage to British manufacturing capability over the last 20 years.”
EU chief negotiator Michel Barnier and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen (Image: GETTY)