Industry 5 and the Human in Human-Centric Manufacturing

Author:

Briken Kendra1ORCID,Moore Jed1ORCID,Scholarios Dora1ORCID,Rose Emily2,Sherlock Andrew3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Work, Employment and Organisation, Strathclyde Business School, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow G4 0QU, UK

2. Law School, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow G4 0LT, UK

3. National Manufacturing Institute Scotland, Renfrew PA3 2EF, UK

Abstract

Industry 4 (I4) was a revolutionary new stage for technological progress in manufacturing which promised a new level of interconnectedness between a diverse range of technologies. Sensors, as a point technology, play an important role in these developments, facilitating human–machine interaction and enabling data collection for system-level technologies. Concerns for human labour working in I4 environments (e.g., health and safety, data generation and extraction) are acknowledged by Industry 5 (I5), an update of I4 which promises greater attention to human–machine relations through a values-driven approach to collaboration and co-design. This article explores how engineering experts integrate values promoted by policy-makers into both their thinking about the human in their work and in their writing. This paper demonstrates a novel interdisciplinary approach in which an awareness of different disciplinary epistemic values associated with humans and work guides a systematic literature review and interpretive coding of practice-focussed engineering papers. Findings demonstrate evidence of an I5 human-centric approach: a high value for employees as “end-users” of innovative systems in manufacturing; and an increase in output addressing human activity in modelling and the technologies available to address this concern. However, epistemic publishing practices show that efforts to increase the effectiveness of manufacturing systems often neglect worker voice.

Funder

UKRI/AHRC

University of Strathclyde, Humanities and Social Science Bridging Disciplines fund

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Biochemistry,Instrumentation,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,Analytical Chemistry

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