Occupational Cognitive Ecology and Internalizing Symptom Profiles: A LatentVariable Analysis of Backend and NonBackend Developers within a Multidimensional Mental Health Framework
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.63056/ACAD.003.02.0888Keywords:
anxiety , depression, Multigroup SEM, latentvariable modellingAbstract
Grounded in the paradigm of occupational cognitive ecology, this study modelled the latent structure linking cognitive load, mental fatigue, and internalizing symptomatology (anxiety, depression) in backend and nonbackend software developers within a multidimensional mental health framework. A crosssectional dataset (N = 320) was analysed via structural equation modelling (SEM), incorporating observed indicators from the Cognitive Load Questionnaire (CLQ), Mental Fatigue Scale (MFS), and standardised anxiety and depression measures, alongside sociodemographic moderators (educational level, family system structure).
The measurement model demonstrated excellent fit (χ²/df = 1.94, CFI = .962, TLI = .955, RMSEA = .054, SRMR = .041), supporting the distinct but correlated latent factors of cognitive load, fatigue, and internalizing symptoms. In the structural model, cognitive load significantly predicted mental fatigue (β = .69, p < .001), anxiety (β = .54, p < .001), and depression (β = .49, p < .001), consistent with cognitiveenergetics theory (Boksem & Tops, 2008). Multigroup SEM revealed that backend developers exhibited steeper loadtofatigue and loadtoanxiety paths than nonbackend developers, reflecting taskspecific cognitive demands.
Educational level moderated the load–fatigue (β = –.23, p < .001) and load–anxiety (β = –.21, p < .001) links, with postgraduates showing attenuated slopes, aligning with metacognitive resource accounts (Efklides, 2008; Eysenck et al., 2007). Family system exerted significant buffering on stress–depression (β = –.11, p < .001) and load–anxiety (β = –.10, p = .002) associations, in line with socioecological resilience perspectives (Triandis, 1995; Uchino, 2009). A threeway interaction (CLQ × Education × Family System; β = –.09, p = .005) confirmed multiplicative protective effects, with postgraduates in extended families demonstrating the lowest predicted fatigue under high load.
These findings advance the field by integrating latentvariable modelling with occupational mentalhealth theory, highlighting how rolespecific cognitive demands, educational resources, and familial support interact to shape internalizing symptom profiles. Implications include the need for precisiontargeted interventions that align loadmanagement strategies with the cognitive ecology of specific developer roles.
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Copyright (c) 2024 Prof. Dr. Leenah Ãskaree, Aqsa Yaqoob, Ahmad Shujāã Baig, Engineer Ãmmaar Baig (Author)

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