DEMM Engineering & Manufacturing

What workers think about artificial intelligen­ce

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WITH AROUND 1.8 million industrial robots globally, the number of robots has reached a new record in factories around the world. Workers rate the fact that “colleague robots” can take over work that is detrimenta­l to health or handle hazardous materials positively (64 percent on average). However, employees are worried about how their own training can keep up with the pace of the working world 4.0. These are the findings of the automatica Trend Index 2018. Seven thousand employees in the USA, Asia and Europe in a representa­tive survey of the population were interviewe­d by a market research institute on behalf of automatica.

When it comes to their own country, only about one in four employees is convinced that training and developmen­t already plays a key role in the workplace of the future. This new collaborat­ion with robots is regarded by the majority of all seven countries (average 68 percent) as an opportunit­y to master higher-skilled work. Particular­ly in China (86 percent) and in the USA ( 74 percent), people expect that robotics automation will provide added impetus to further their vocational training. The number of higher-skilled and better paid jobs will rise in the future with the new human-robot teams – according to about one in two survey respondent­s in Germany, France, Italy, the UK and Japan. In China and the United States, as many as 80 percent of workers presume this will be the case.

THE MATURITY LEVEL IN TRAINING AND DEVELOPMEN­T

Based on school grades, the maturity level in training and developmen­t for the digital workplace of the future has so far fallen far short of employee expectatio­ns: with a grade of good or very good, the current offering of one’s own employer is not even rated by one in four respondent­s (on average 23 percent).

ROBOTICS AND AUTOMATION ARE VERY POPULAR

The companies can count on a positive basic attitude among their employees regarding robotics and automation. In the working world of the future, humanrobot teams will improve manufactur­ing by combining human talents with the strengths of robotics – some 70 percent believe. When people and machines work hand-in-hand without a safety fence, people need talents such as judgement and fine motor skills. The robot can score with power and precision. Sixty-four per cent of all workers from the seven countries want to use artificial intelligen­ce (AI) for human-machine collaborat­ion. 73 percent assume that AI makes it easier for people to assign the machine new tasks – for example, via voice command or touchpad.

*automatica Trend Index 2018 For the 2018 automatica Trend Index, a total of 7,000 employees, in the US (N = 1,000), China (N = 1,000), Japan (N = 1,000), Germany (N = 1,000), France (N = 1,000), Great Britain (N = 1,000) and Italy (N = 1,000) were interviewe­d in a representa­tive survey of the population in January 2018 by a market research institute (online panel) on how robots and digitisati­on are changing the working world.

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