AI and Stress




Dang Thang; Huynh Phuong

PublisherCenter for Open Science

2026

INVEST Working Papers

147

2737 - 0534

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.31235/osf.io/5ymvq_v1

https://doi.org/10.31235/osf.io/5ymvq_v1



Given increasing artificial intelligence (AI) adoption at work, understanding its health implications is critically important. We use rich survey data from Finland and apply propensity score matching that controls for selection into AI adoption
to estimate the relationship between workplace AI usage and workers’ mental health. AI adoption increases the probability of workers experiencing reported stress by 4.4 percentage points, equivalent to a 25.6% increase relative to baseline.
This burden is primarily concentrated among men, non-supervisors, unionized workers, and employees in medium-sized workplaces. Our mechanism analysis reveals that stress is driven by labor intensification rather than displacement
fears, with AI adoption leading to significant increases in unpaid work and intense work absorption but no effect on job insecurity.



This work was funded by the Research Council of Finland (project numbers 355153 and 345546).


Last updated on 11/03/2026 01:51:53 PM