Putting Humans Back in the Loop: An Affordance Conceptualization of the 4th Industrial Revolution
Melville, Nigel; Robert, Lionel Jr; Xiao, Xiao
2022-12-07
Citation
Melville, N. P., Robert, L.P. and Xiao, X. (2023). Putting Humans Back in the Loop: An Affordance Conceptualization of the 4th Industrial Revolution, Information Systems Journal, forthcoming
Abstract
The current technology epoch—sometimes called the fourth industrial revolution (4IR)—involves the innovative application of rapidly advancing digital technologies such as artificial intelligence. Societal implications of the 4IR are significant and wide-ranging, from life-saving drug development to privacy loss and app addiction. A review of the information systems literature, however, reveals a narrow focus on technology-enabled business benefits. Scant research attention has been paid to the role of humans and humanistic outcomes. To spur new research addressing these issues, formalized affordance theory is employed to develop a new 4IR conceptualization. Four groupings of affordances that capture salient 4IR action possibilities are developed within two categories: machine emulation of human cognition (expansive decision-making and creativity automation) and machine emulation of human communication (relationship with humans and intermachine teaming). Implications are explored in the context of human-machine coworking and the development of artificial intelligence safety regulations. Overall, the affordance conceptualization of the 4IR advances a new sociotechnical lexicon of action possibilities and their joint enactment in achieving humanistic and instrumental outcomes, enabling alignment of the scope of 4IR research with the scope of 4IR phenomena—and bringing humans back into the loop.Publisher
Information Systems Journal
Deep Blue DOI
Subjects
fourth industrial revolution digital technologies affordances sociotechnical human cognition technology-enabled business formalized affordance theory app addiction privacy los Societal implications machine emulation artificial intelligence sociotechnical theory Human Robot Interaction human computer interaction Technological determinism Technology universalism Creativity Automation Intermachine teaming affordance assemblages 4IR affordances AI regulations
Types
Article
Metadata
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