Author:
Rinta-Kahila Tapani, ,Penttinen Esko,Salovaara Antti,Soliman Wael,Ruissalo Joona, , , ,
Abstract
Cognitive automation powered by advanced intelligent technologies is increasingly enabling
organizations to automate more of their knowledge work tasks. Although this often offers higher
efficiency and lower costs, cognitive automation exacerbates the erosion of human skill and expertise
in automated tasks. Accepting the erosion of obsolete skills is necessary to reap the benefits of
technology—however, the erosion of essential human expertise is problematic if workers remain
accountable for tasks for which they lack sufficient understanding, rendering them incapable of
responding if the automation fails. Though the phenomenon is widely acknowledged, the dynamics
behind such undesired skill erosion are poorly understood. Thus, taking the perspective of
sociotechnical systems, we conducted a case study of an accounting firm that had experienced skill
erosion over a number of years due to reliance on their software’s automated functions. We synthesized
our findings using causal loop modeling based on system dynamics. The resulting dynamic model
explains skill erosion via an interplay between humans’ automation reliance, complacency, and mindful
conduction. It shows how increasing reliance on automation fosters complacency at both individual
and organizational levels, weakening workers’ mindfulness across three work task facets (activity
awareness, competence maintenance, and output assessment), resulting in skill erosion. Such skill
erosion may remain obscure, acknowledged by neither workers nor managers. We conclude by
discussing the implications for theory and practice and identifying directions for future research.
Publisher
Association for Information Systems
Subject
Computer Science Applications,Information Systems
Cited by
6 articles.
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