Employee acceptance of wearable technology in the workplace.

Author(s)
Jacobs, J.V. Hettinger, L.J. Huang, Y.-H. Jeffries, S. Lesch, M.F. Simmons, L.A. Verma, S.K. & Willetts, J.L.
Year
Abstract

Wearable technology has many industrial applications. Optimal use adherence and outcomes largely depend on employee acceptance of the technology. This study determined factors that predict employee acceptance of wearables. An online survey of 1273 employed adults asked about demographics, job and organizational characteristics, experience with and beliefs about wearables, and willingness to use wearables. Use cases focused on workplace safety elicited the highest acceptance. An employee's performance expectancy and their organizational safety climate were common predictors of acceptance across use cases. Positive past experiences coincided with involving employees in choosing the device and adequately informing them about data use. Organizations intending to implement wearable technology should (a) focus its use on improving workplace safety, (b) advance a positive safety climate, (c) ensure sufficient evidence to support employees' beliefs that the wearable will meet its objective, and (d) involve and inform employees in the process of selecting and implementing wearable technology. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
20210254 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Applied Ergonomics, Vol. 78 (July 2017), p. 148-156, ref.

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.