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MISQ Archivist
Through the Eyes of
Experts: A Socio-Cognitive Perspective on the Automation of
Fingerprint Work
Christopher J.
Davis and Ellen M. Hufnagel
Abstract
Prior research on technological frames indicates that many of the
difficulties associated with systems implementation stem from
differences in the meanings users, managers, and system developers
attribute to automation projects. Although the concept of
technological frames has been used to explore the bases for
intergroup conflict during implementation, it is also a useful
device for probing more deeply into the effects complex systems have
on users’ perceptions of their work and the role-altering effects of
new technologies. Drawing upon personal
construct theory
and job characteristics
theory, we adapted the
repertory grid technique to explore
the technology-in- use frames of a group of occupationally
certified fingerprint technicians (FPTs). Our investigation
reveals the important role the FPTs’ occupationally
defined values and norms played in structuring their existing
work practices and the tensions produced by organizationally
mandated efforts to restructure the logic of their
expertise-based hierarchies. These insights illuminate the effects
work redesign had on the FPTs’ task environment, the process logic
that guided specific work practices, and the roles defined by their
expertise-based hierarchies, and provide a basis for understanding
the FPTs’ unanticipated reactions to it.
Keywords: Technological frames, work redesign, job
characteristics theory, personal construct theory, repertory grid,
technicians
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