Barigozzi, Francesca ;
Biroli, Pietro ;
Monfardini, Chiara ;
Montinari, Natalia ;
Pisanelli, Elena ;
Vitellozzi, Sveva
(2025)
Beyond Time: Unveiling the Invisible Burden of Mental Load.
Bologna:
Dipartimento di Scienze economiche,
p. 50.
DOI
10.6092/unibo/amsacta/8356.
In: Quaderni - Working Paper DSE
(1203).
ISSN 2282-6483.
Full text available as:
Abstract
This paper introduces a novel, scalable methodology to measure individual perceptions of gaps in mental load—the cognitive and emotional burden associated with organizing household and childcare tasks—within heterosexual couples. Using original data from the TIMES Observatory in Italy, the study combines time-use diaries with new survey indicators to quantify cognitive labor, emotional fatigue, and the spillover of mental load into the workplace. Results reveal systematic gender asymmetries: women are significantly more likely than men to bear organizational responsibility for domestic tasks, report lower satisfaction with this division, and experience higher emotional fatigue. These burdens are underestimated by their partners. The effects are particularly pronounced among college-educated and employed women, who also report greater spillovers of family responsibilities than men during paid work hours. The perceived responsibility for managing family activities is more strongly associated with within-couple gaps in time use than with the absolute time spent on their execution, underscoring the relational and conflictual
nature of mental load.
Abstract
This paper introduces a novel, scalable methodology to measure individual perceptions of gaps in mental load—the cognitive and emotional burden associated with organizing household and childcare tasks—within heterosexual couples. Using original data from the TIMES Observatory in Italy, the study combines time-use diaries with new survey indicators to quantify cognitive labor, emotional fatigue, and the spillover of mental load into the workplace. Results reveal systematic gender asymmetries: women are significantly more likely than men to bear organizational responsibility for domestic tasks, report lower satisfaction with this division, and experience higher emotional fatigue. These burdens are underestimated by their partners. The effects are particularly pronounced among college-educated and employed women, who also report greater spillovers of family responsibilities than men during paid work hours. The perceived responsibility for managing family activities is more strongly associated with within-couple gaps in time use than with the absolute time spent on their execution, underscoring the relational and conflictual
nature of mental load.
Document type
Monograph
(Working Paper)
Creators
Keywords
mental load, gender, time allocation, time-use data.
Subjects
ISSN
2282-6483
DOI
Deposit date
19 May 2025 08:09
Last modified
19 May 2025 08:09
Project name
Funding program
European Union - PNRR PE NextGenerationEU
URI
Other metadata
Document type
Monograph
(Working Paper)
Creators
Keywords
mental load, gender, time allocation, time-use data.
Subjects
ISSN
2282-6483
DOI
Deposit date
19 May 2025 08:09
Last modified
19 May 2025 08:09
Project name
Funding program
European Union - PNRR PE NextGenerationEU
URI
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