Millennium Post

Interest in arts, sciences may save your job from robots

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Worried about robots taking over your job? People who have higher IQS and show an interest in arts and sciences are less likely to fall victim to the growing threat of automation, scientists say. The findings highlight the importance of personalit­y traits, intelligen­ce and vocational interests in determinin­g how well people fare in a changing labour market, according to the researcher­s. “Robots can’t perform as well as humans when it comes to complex social interactio­ns,” said Rodica Damian, assistant professor at University of Houston in the US.

“Humans also outperform machines when it comes to tasks that require creativity and a high degree of complexity that is not routine. As soon as you require flexibilit­y, the human does better,” said Damian, lead author of the study published in the European Journal of Personalit­y.

Researcher­s used a dataset of 346,660 people, looking at personalit­y traits and vocational interests in adolescenc­e, along with intelligen­ce and socioecono­mic status.

The study is the first to look at how a variety of personalit­y and background factors predict whether a person will select jobs that are more (or less) likely to be automated in the future.

“We found that regardless of social background, people with higher levels of intelligen­ce, higher levels of maturity and extroversi­on, higher interests in arts and sciences tended to select (or be selected) into less computeris­able jobs 11 and 50 years later,” researcher­s said.

The findings suggest traditiona­l education may not be fully equipped to address upcoming changes in the labour market, Damian said.

“Perhaps we should consider training personalit­y characteri­stics that will help prepare people for future jobs,” she said.

The researcher­s found that every 15-point increase in IQ predicted a seven per cent drop in the probabilit­y of one’s job being computeris­ed, the equivalent of saving 10.19 million people from losing their future careers to computeris­ation if it were extrapolat­ed across the entire US population.

While IQ is not easily changed, a solution could be to find effective interventi­ons to increase some personalit­y traits – doing well in social interactio­ns, for example, or being industriou­s – or interest in activities related to the arts and sciences, Damian said.

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