| Literature DB >> 32457688 |
Patrick Beer1, Regina H Mulder1.
Abstract
Technology is changing the way organizations and their employees need to accomplish their work. Empirical evidence on this topic is scarce. The aim of this study is to provide an overview of the effects of technological developments on work characteristics and to derive the implications for work demands and continuous vocational education and training (CVET). The following research questions are answered: What are the effects of new technologies on work characteristics? What are the implications thereof for continuous vocational education and training? Technologies, defined as digital, electrical or mechanical tools that affect the accomplishment of work tasks, are considered in various disciplines, such as sociology or psychology. A theoretical framework based on theories from these disciplines (e.g., upskilling, task-based approach) was developed and statements on the relationships between technology and work characteristics, such as complexity, autonomy, or meaningfulness, were derived. A systematic literature review was conducted by searching databases from the fields of psychology, sociology, economics and educational science. Twenty-one studies met the inclusion criteria. Empirical evidence was extracted and its implications for work demands and CVET were derived by using a model that illustrates the components of learning environments. Evidence indicates an increase in complexity and mental work, especially while working with automated systems and robots. Manual work is reported to decrease on many occasions. Workload and workflow interruptions increase simultaneously with autonomy, especially with regard to digital communication devices. Role expectations and opportunities for development depend on how the profession and the technology relate to each other, especially when working with automated systems. The implications for the work demands necessary to deal with changes in work characteristics include knowledge about technology, openness toward change and technology, skills for self- and time management and for further professional and career development. Implications for the design of formal learning environments (i.e., the content, method, assessment, and guidance) include that the work demands mentioned must be part of the content of the trainings, the teachers/trainers must be equipped to promote those work demands, and that instruction models used for the learning environments must be flexible in their application.Entities:
Keywords: automation; continuous vocational education and training; systematic review; technology; work characteristics; work demands
Year: 2020 PMID: 32457688 PMCID: PMC7226038 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00918
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Components of CVET learning environments (adapted from Mulder et al., 2015, p. 501).
Final search string.
| Search terms for technology (Subject terms) | “artificial intelligence” or robot* or “big data” or computer* or “mobile device” or “wearable technology” or “implant” or “cloud computing” or “virtual reality” or “augmented reality” or blockchain or “automated manufacturing” or wireless or “data processing” or “real-time” or smart or cyber* or “assistive technology” or “instant messaging” or “social media” or “mobile communication” or ICT* or “information and communication technology” or “machine learning” or avatar* or “RFID” or “digital device*” or “mobile device*” or virtual* or “autonomous driving” or digitization or digitalization or digitisation or digitalisation or “information technology” or internet or smartphone or sensor* or “cyber-physical-system” or “internet of things” or IoT or “mobile internet” or “cloud technology” or “automated system” or “workplace automation” AND |
| Search terms for work characteristics | Meaning* or meaningfulness or complexity or flexibility or routine* or “non-routine*” or “job demand” or intensity or workload* or workflow or pressure or privacy “skill variety” or “task variety” or “skill diversity” or “task diversity” or responsibility or autonom* or control* or “decision-making” or freedom or alienation or identity or power or competition or uncertainty or “job characteristics” or “work characteristics” or “task characteristics” or “work environment” AND |
| Restriction: Empirical evidence (Abstract) | empirical* or quantitative or qualitative or survey* or “case study” or questionnaire* or interview* or evidence AND |
| Restriction: Work context | Workplace or job or career or employment |
Figure 2Flowchart of literature search process.
Characteristics of the studies.
| Publication year | |
| 2015–2019 | 11 |
| 2010–2014 | 7 |
| 2005–2009 | 1 |
| 2000–2004 | 1 |
| 1990–1999 | 1 |
| Domain | |
| Health care/Pharmaceutical industry/Therapy | 5 |
| Telecommunication/Technology | 2 |
| Manufacturing/Automobile/Port terminal | 4 |
| Accounting/Government/Postal service | 3 |
| Various | 7 |
| Origin | |
| North America | 7 |
| Asia | 1 |
| Europe | 10 |
| Australia | 2 |
| Africa | 1 |
| Design | |
| Survey study | 6 |
| Secondary analysis | 2 |
| Interview study | 5 |
| Case study | 3 |
| Action research | 1 |
| Other qualitative approach | 4 |
| Instruments | |
| Questionnaires | 9 |
| Interviews | 10 |
| Focus groups | 3 |
| Observations | 2 |
| Internal data (documents, log-data) | 2 |
| Workshop discussion | 1 |
| Data | |
| Quantitative | 8 |
| Qualitative | 13 |
N = 21.
Overview for final work characteristics and the exemplary work-related aspects assigned to them.
| Workflow interruptions | Extent to which employees can focus on a single task and avoid interruptions | Level of interruptions |
| Quality of workflow | ||
| Quality of communication processes | ||
| Level of multitasking | ||
| Need for multitasking | ||
| Workload | Amount and pace of work | Work overload |
| Job demands (workload pressure) | ||
| Work pressure | ||
| Level of job speed | ||
| Time pressure | ||
| Manual work | Extent to which the environment is characterized by physical tasks and requirements | Facilitation of physical tasks |
| Content and scope of routine work tasks | ||
| Amount of physically demanding tasks | ||
| Physical demands | ||
| Mental work | Extent to which the environment is characterized by mental/cognitive tasks and requirements | Diagnosing and navigating demand |
| Amount of monitoring tasks | ||
| Problem-solving demand | ||
| New challenging mental tasks | ||
| Privacy | Extent to which employees have control over their public image and their personal data at work | Invasion of privacy |
| Perceived managerial surveillance | ||
| Managerial tracking of behavior | ||
| Control over work-related data | ||
| Peer-monitoring | ||
| Autonomy | Extent to which there is discretion regarding the type, order, methods, or time in which work needs to be done | Method-order autonomy |
| Job decision latitude | ||
| Time-method control | ||
| Flexibility | ||
| Instant accessibility of people and knowledge | ||
| Job enrichment | ||
| Role expectations | Extent to which the job matches one's own and others' expectations regarding the role and the meaning associated with it | Role ambiguity |
| Role expansion | ||
| Role specific inner obligation for availability | ||
| Connectivity or networking pressure | ||
| Production responsibility | ||
| Meaningful content of work | ||
| Complexity | Extent to which there is a lack of structure and transparency resulting from highly diverse and interconnected tasks and the associated ambiguity | Complexity |
| Job complexity | ||
| Situational awareness | ||
| Opportunities for development | Extent to which work provides opportunities for self-development and the need for development of skill and knowledge | Opportunities for skill and knowledge-acquisition |
| Opportunities for professional development | ||
| Continuous qualification demands | ||
| Requirement to stay up to date with new technologies |
Studies providing quantitative evidence for the relationship between technology and work-related aspects.
| 1 | Computer | Amount of computer work (IV) | Workload (IV) | Workload | 2, b, i | Kraan et al., | ||
| Method-order autonomy (IV) | Autonomy | |||||||
| Technological pacing (IV) | Workload | Workload | ||||||
| Method-order autonomy | Autonomy | |||||||
| 2 | ICT | Presenteeism (IV) | Invasion of privacy (ME) | Privacy | 1, a, i | Ayyagari et al., | ||
| Work overload (ME) | Workload | |||||||
| Role ambiguity (ME) | Role expectations | |||||||
| Anonymity (IV) | Invasion of privacy | Privacy | ||||||
| Work overload | Workload | |||||||
| Role ambiguity | Role expectations | |||||||
| Pace of change (IV) | Invasion of privacy | Privacy | ||||||
| Work overload | Workload | |||||||
| Role ambiguity | Role expectations | |||||||
| 3 | ICT | Email usage beyond the workplace (IV) | Job decision latitude (DV) | Autonomy | 1, a, i | Chen and McDonald, | ||
| Phone usage beyond the workplace (IV) | Job decision latitude | Autonomy | ||||||
| Positive ICT impacts (Productivity, flexibility, collaboration, connection) (IV) | Job decision latitude | Autonomy | ||||||
| Negative ICT impacts (long hours, job stress, stickiness, distraction) (IV) | Job decision latitude | Autonomy | ||||||
| 4 | Information technology system (ERP) | Frequency of computer usage (IT use) (IV) | Complexity after ERP implementation (DV) | Complexity | 1, a, ii | Marler and Liang, | ||
| ERP use (IV) | Complexity after ERP implementation | Complexity | ||||||
| 5 | Letter sorting machine | Machine-paced work (IV) | Autonomy (ME) | Autonomy | 1, a, i | Amick and Celentano, | ||
| Job demands (Workload pressure) (ME) | Workload | |||||||
| 6 | Automated Manufacturing Technology | Technological coupling (Complexity of machine) (IV) | Time method control (IV) | Autonomy | 1, a, i | Dvash and Mannheim, | ||
| Monitoring demand (IV) | Mental work | |||||||
| Problem-solving demand (IV) | Mental work | |||||||
| Production responsibility (IV) | Role expectations | |||||||
| Job enrichment (IV) | Autonomy | |||||||
| 7 | Computer | Daily computer-use for work (IV) | Level of job speed (ME) | Workload | 2, a, i | Chesley, | ||
| Level of job interruptions (ME) | Workflow interruptions | |||||||
| Level of multitasking (ME) | Workflow interruptions | |||||||
| Job autonomy (CV) | Autonomy | |||||||
| Job complexity (CV) | Complexity | |||||||
| 8 | Social media | Frequency of social networking service use for work-related communication (IV) | Work pressure (ME) | Workload | 1, a, i | van Zoonen and Rice, | ||
| Autonomy (ME) | Autonomy | |||||||
IV, independent variable; ME, mediating variable; DV, dependent variable; CV, control variable; r, Pearson's r correlation; B, unstandardized coefficients; Concerning methodology: 1, survey; 2, secondary analysis; a, questionnaires; b, interviews; i, cross-sectional; ii, longitudinal/multiple measurements;
p < 0.05;
p < 0.01;
No level of significance reported.
Studies providing qualitative evidence for the relationship between technology and work-related aspects.
| 9 | Clinical technology (CT) | Exploration of nurses' perceptions of new technology in relation to their skills, autonomy and experience of work | Increased workload due to higher efficiency and patient flow rates accomplished by CT use | Workload | 1, a, i | Gough et al., | |
| Increased complexity of interventions due to enhanced treatment potential | Complexity | ||||||
| Enhanced opportunities for clinical knowledge- and skill-acquisition due to clinical information provided by CT in a high dependency environment | Opportunities for development | ||||||
| Information technology (IT) | Reduced content of work (e.g., time with patient care) due to higher reporting requirements by IT-system (resulting in time spent with technology) | Role expectations | |||||
| No feeling of managerial surveillance or control by IT database | Privacy | ||||||
| 10 | Field technology | Exploration if employees' right for data privacy is challenged in the face of electronic governance and control by management | Increased control by management through continuous tracking of behavior and performance and managerial allocation of work (labor management) | Privacy | 1, a, e, i | Tranvik and Bråten, | |
| Less control over work-related data by employees due to automatic and non-transparent data transmission | Privacy | ||||||
| 11 | Automated terminals | Understanding how work, job roles and associated skills have changed across technological shifts | Facilitation and acceleration of routine and physical work tasks through process automation controlled by computer technologies | Manual work | 4, a, d, ii | Unreported (Port terminal work; Australia) | Gekara and Thanh Nguyen, |
| Higher diagnosing and navigating tasks within a digitized work environment including mobile and fixed digital devices | Mental work | ||||||
| Decreased content and scope of operational tasks and increase in monitoring tasks due to digital devices | Manual work | ||||||
| 12 | Automated production systems | Exploration of the relationship between the quality of human-machine interaction and work satisfaction, workload and stress | Increased time pressure and need for multitasking due to technical interruptions | Workflow interruptions | 1, a, i | Körner et al., | |
| Occasional low situational awareness due to increased system complexity and inadequate information | Complexity | ||||||
| Continuous qualification requirements to deal with complex computer-related problems and expectation of learning-by-doing | Opportunities for development | ||||||
| 13 | Bar-coded medication administration technology | Investigating the impact of automated medication administration technology on nurses' problem-solving behavior | Increased workload due to the technology blocking familiar problem-solving strategies | Workload | 4, a, d, i | Holden et al., | |
| Increasing occurrence of new problems that require creative problem-solving and “workarounds” by using or bypassing the system | Mental work | ||||||
| 14 | Automated dispensing system | Determining the effects of installing an automated dispensing system on staff experience of work, psychological contract, individual outcomes and future plans | Opportunities for role expansion due to the opportunity to approach new value-adding tasks through automation | Role expectations | 2, c, ii | James et al., | |
| Increasing physical demands for employees directly working with the system due to monotony and time pressures | Manual work | ||||||
| Reduction of roles for employees that support the system directly (e.g., technicians) | Role expectations | ||||||
| 15 | Cobots | Identifying issues for the African workforce regarding the implementation of cobots | Decreased amount of physically demanding tasks due to physical support by cobots | Manual work | 4, b, i | Calitz et al., | |
| Increase in new and challenging mental tasks that require a certain understanding, acceptance and trust toward cobots | Mental work | ||||||
| 16 | Social media | Explication of the boundary-related rules regarding personal and professional social media use at work | Perceived feeling of peer-monitoring and judgement in case of personal social media use (e.g., Facebook, Twitter) | Privacy | 2, a, i | Walden, | |
| Perceived pressure to network with peers and clients with professional social media due to acceptance and positive appraisal of work-related use (e.g., LinkedIn) | Role expectations | ||||||
| 17 | Tools for digital communication | Determining the relationship between communication in the digital work environment and wellbeing at work, factors influencing the relationship, and its context | Interruption of workflow and attention due to the constant flow of messages and communication via various communication platforms and devices | Workflow interruptions | 3, e, f, i | Bordi et al., | |
| Requirement to stay up to date with new tools for digital communication due to changing technology and customer preferences | Opportunities for development | ||||||
| Increased flexibility (time, place, task) due to self-initiated multitasking and use of various tools | Autonomy | ||||||
| 18 | Work-extending technologies | Examining the effects of work-extending technologies on working time, relationships, and strategies employed by employees to deal with technological effects and its impact | Increased efficiency, productivity and flexibility (working from home or while traveling) if work extending technologies can be used | Autonomy | 1, a, c, i | Towers et al., | |
| Higher workload due to perceived expectations for constant availability and longer work days | Workload | ||||||
| 19 | Robots | Exploring therapists' needs regarding robots and functions that make robots perceived as useful | Potential workflow support if robots support repeatable tasks, observe behavior and give objective feedback | Workflow interruptions | 4, b, i | Zubrycki and Granosik, | |
| No creation of opportunities to improve therapist value or for professional self-development by robots | Opportunities for development | ||||||
| 20 | Robot-facilitated pharmacy distribution | Understanding to what extent employers considered job quality in advance to an automated system's introduction and how those considerations impacted various aspects of job quality for employees | More opportunities for upskilling and interdisciplinary learning through job rotation as a consequence of the system's introduction (in general) | Opportunities for development | 2, a, c, i | Findlay et al., | |
| Increase in meaningful job content (less repetitive work, greater task variety, more interaction with colleagues and patients) for ward-based employees whose work is strongly supported by the automated system (i.e., ward-based technicians and support staff) | Role expectations | ||||||
| Higher paced, more repetitive and less skilled work for employees that support the system directly (i.e., dispensary technicians) | Role expectations | ||||||
| Less possibilities for learning and career development due to decreased opportunities for job rotation for some employees (i.e., dispensary technicians) | Opportunities for development | ||||||
| 21 | ICT | Examination of specific stressors and benefits resulting from work-related technology-use in public relations, journalism and advertising | Regular interruptions of workflow due to constant availability via mobile communication | Workflow interruptions | 1, a, i | Ninaus et al., | |
| Connectivity pressure as a consequence of increased response expectations due to the mobile wireless communication | Role expectations | ||||||
| Inner obligation for availability as a result of being able to perform and compete at any time | Role expectations | ||||||
| Improved workflow and improved communication as a result of instant communication detached from workplace and working time | Workflow interruptions | ||||||
| Instant accessibility of people and knowledge as a result of flexible device-use and integration of various digital platforms and devices | Autonomy | ||||||
| Increased flexibility as a result of mobile technologies allowing to autonomously allocate working time and place | Autonomy |
Concerning methodology: 1, interview study; 2, case study; 3, action research; 4, other qualitative approaches; a, interviews; b, questionnaire; c, focus groups; d, observations; e, internal data (documents, log-data); f, workshop-discussion; i, cross-sectional; ii, longitudinal.
Overview over identified relationships between technology and work characteristics.
| 7, 17 | Level of interruptions | Workflow interruptions | ⊕ | + | ||||||
| 19, 21 | Support of workflow | −+ | + | |||||||
| 7, 12 | Level of multitasking | ⊕ | + | |||||||
| 2, 1, 9, 13, 18 | Workload | Workload | ⊕⊕ | ⊕⊖⊕+ | + | + | ||||
| 5, 8 | Workload pressure/Work pressure | ⊕ | ⊕ | |||||||
| 7, 12 | Level of job speed/Time pressure | ⊕ | + | |||||||
| 11 | Facilitation of physical tasks | Manual work | − | |||||||
| 11, 15 | Content, scope and amount of routine tasks | − | − | |||||||
| 14 | Physical demands | + | ||||||||
| 11 | Diagnosing and navigating demand | Mental work | + | |||||||
| 6, 11 | Monitoring tasks/demand | ⊘+ | ||||||||
| 6, 13 | Problem-solving demand | ⊘+ | ||||||||
| 15 | New challenging mental tasks | + | ||||||||
| 2 | Invasion of privacy | Privacy | ⊕⊖⊕ | |||||||
| 9, 16 | Managerial- or peer surveillance | / | + | |||||||
| 10 | Control over work-related data | − | ||||||||
| 10 | Managerial tracking of behavior | + | ||||||||
| 1, 6, 21 | Method-order autonomy/Time method control | Autonomy | ⊕⊖ | + | ⊖ | |||||
| 3, 6 | Job decision latitude/Job enrichment | ⊕⊕⊖⊘ | ⊘ | |||||||
| 7 | Job autonomy | ⊘ | ||||||||
| 5, 8 | Autonomy | ⊖ | ⊕ | |||||||
| 17, 18, 21 | Flexibility | +++ | ||||||||
| 2 | Role ambiguity | Role expectations | ⊕⊕⊘ | |||||||
| 6, 14, 19 | Role expansion | ⊘+− | − | |||||||
| 21, 16 | Availability, connectivity and networking pressure | ++ | + | |||||||
| 9, 20 | Meaningful content of work | − | +− | |||||||
| 4, 9 | Complexity | Complexity | ⊕⊕ | + | ||||||
| 7 | Job complexity | ⊘ | ||||||||
| 12 | Situational awareness | − | ||||||||
| 9, 19, 20 | Opportunities for learning, and professional development | Opportunities for development | +− | + | − | |||||
| 12, 17 | Continuous qualification demands | + | + |
+, positive relationship; –, negative relationship; /, explicitly no relationship; Quantitative results are encircled; the total number of effects may exceed the number of studies reported due some studies reporting several different effects.
Supplementary studies on the relationship between technology and work-related demands.
| 22 | Computer | Perception of controllability (IV) | Exploratory use (low enrichment environment) (ME) | 1, a, i | Ghani and Deshpande, | ||
| Exploratory use (high enrichment environment) (ME) | |||||||
| 23 | Care robots | Negative impact on employment (IV) | Readiness for robotization (DV) | 1, a, i | Turja et al., | ||
| Experience in robot use (IV) | Readiness for robotization | ||||||
| 24 | Robots | Daily internet use at work (IV) | Individual level robot acceptance at work (DV) | 2, a, i | Turja and Oksanen, | ||
| Robot experience (IV) | Individual level robot acceptance at work | ||||||
| 25 | Telemedicine technology | Perceived usefulness (IV) | Attitude (ME) | 1, a, i | Chau and Hu, | ||
| 26 | Blockchain technology | Perceived usefulness (IV) | Attitude (ME) | 1, a, i | Kamble et al., | ||
| 27 | Information technology system | Perceived usefulness (IV) | Attitude (DV) | 1, a, i | Chow et al., | ||
| 28 | Various workplace technologies | Information demands (IV) | Cognitive skills (DV) | 1, a, i | Spell, | ||
| Interpersonal skills (DV) | |||||||
| Psychomotor skills (DV) | |||||||
| Programmability (IV) | Cognitive skills | ||||||
| Interpersonal skills | |||||||
| Psychomotor skills | |||||||
| Number of exceptions (IV) | Cognitive skills | ||||||
| Interpersonal skills | |||||||
| Psychomotor skills | |||||||
IV, independent variable; ME, mediating variable; DV, dependent variable; CV, control variable; r, Pearson's r correlation; B, unstandardized coefficients; Concerning methodology: 1, survey; 2, secondary analysis; a, questionnaires; i, cross-sectional; ii, longitudinal/multiple measurements;
p < 0.05;
p < 0.01.