Manufacturing Leads the Adoption of Advanced Technologies
Evidence from the annual business survey shows manufacturing set the frontier for many advanced technologies including machine learning, robotics, touchscreens, machine vision, and RFID.
A popular misconception is that industrial companies are out-of-touch with the latest in technology. While that may be the case for some smaller manufacturers, the data in Figure 6 above shows that manufacturing firms are leading consumers of advanced technologies. Not only do manufacturers test advanced technology often, they get worthwhile technologies into production (large circle and lower test-to-use ratio). This directly aligns with my experiences that manufacturers are adept at testing technology, quantifying financial impact, and integrating into production through various continuous improvement processes. Additional figures and discussion within the working paper, “Advanced Technologies Adoption and Use by U.S. Firms: Evidence from the Annual Business Survey”, gives even more evidence that manufacturers set the frontier for many advanced technologies. The link is below.
Of the nine advanced technologies in Figure 6, what are some of the use cases within industrial operations that make them so prevalent?
Machine Learning - predictive maintenance, predictive in-line quality, demand forecasting, asset performance management
Robotics - welding, paint, lifts, packing, palletizing, pick and place, furnace loading/unloading, material handling, etc.
Touchscreens - controlling machines with human-machine interfaces (HMIs); tablets for real-time KPIs and diagnosing asset health; inventory management
Machine Vision - automated quality inspections, product configuration management, debris identification
RFID - inventory management, maintenance, control systems
Natural Language Processing - product feedback analysis
Voice Recognition - machine control
Automated Vehicles - material transport
Augmented Reality - machine operator training
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Advanced Technologies Adoption and Use by U.S. Firms: Evidence from the Annual Business Survey
Date: December 15, 2020
While robots are usually singled out as a key technology in studies of automation, the overall diffusion of robotics use and testing is very low across firms in the U.S. The use rate is only 1.3% and the testing rate is 0.3%. These levels correspond relatively closely with patterns found in the robotics expenditure question in the 2018 ASM. Robots are primarily concentrated in large, manufacturing firms. The distribution of robots among firms is highly skewed, and the skewness in favor of larger firms can have a disproportionate effect on the economy that is otherwise not obvious from the relatively low overall diffusion rate of robots. The least-used technologies are RFID (1.1%), Augmented Reality (0.8%), and Automated Vehicles (0.8%). Looking at the pairwise adoption of these technologies in Table 14, we find that use of Machine Learning and Machine Vision are most coincident. We find that use of Automated Guided Vehicles is closely associated with use of Augmented Reality, RFID, and Machine Vision.
Read more at National Bureau of Economic Research
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