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Social Processes: What Determines Industrial Workers’ Intention to Use Exoskeletons?

Shirley Elprama, Jorre Vannieuwenhuyze, Sander De Bock, Bram Vanderborght, Kevin De Pauw, Romain Meeusen, An Jacobs

2020Human Factors The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society82 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to test the unified theory of acceptance and use of technology (UTAUT) model for explaining the intention to use exoskeletons among industrial workers. BACKGROUND: Exoskeletons could help reduce physical workload and risk for injuries among industrial workers. Therefore, it is crucial to understand which factors play a role in workers' intention to use such exoskeletons. METHOD: = 124) completed a survey on their attitudes regarding the use of exoskeletons at their workplace. Using partial least squares (PLS) path modeling, the UTAUT model and a revised version of the UTAUT model were fitted to these data. RESULTS: The adapted UTAUT model of Dwivedi et al. (2017) was able to explain up to 75.6% of the variance in intention to use exoskeletons, suggesting a reasonable model fit. CONCLUSION: The model fit suggests that effort expectancy (how easy it seems to use an exoskeleton) plays an important role in predicting the intention to use exoskeletons. Social influence (whether others think workers should use exoskeletons) and performance expectancy (how useful exoskeletons seem to be for work) play a smaller role in predicting the intention to use. APPLICATIONS: This research informs companies about the optimal implementation of exoskeletons by improving the determinants of acceptance among their workers.

Topics & Concepts

ExoskeletonExpectancy theoryWorkloadVariance (accounting)Applied psychologyHuman factors and ergonomicsWork (physics)PsychologyRisk analysis (engineering)EngineeringComputer sciencePoison controlSocial psychologySimulationBusinessEnvironmental healthMedicineMechanical engineeringOperating systemAccountingProsthetics and Rehabilitation RoboticsStroke Rehabilitation and RecoveryAssistive Technology in Communication and Mobility