Barley S R
Cornell University.
Adm Sci Q. 1990 Mar;35(1):61-103.
This paper outlines a role-based approach for conceptualizing and investigating the contention in some previous research that technologies change organizational and occupational structures by transforming patterns of action and interaction. Building on Nadel's theory of social structure, the paper argues that the microsocial dynamics occasioned by new technologies reverberate up levels of analysis in an orderly manner. Specifically, a technology's material attributes are said to have an immediate impact on the nonrelational elements of one or more work roles. These changes, in turn, influence the role's relational elements, which eventually affect the structure of an organization's social networks. Consequently, roles and social networks are held to mediate a technology's structural effects. The theory is illustrated by ethnographic and sociometric data drawn from a comparative field study of the use of traditional and computerized imaging devices in two radiology departments.
本文概述了一种基于角色的方法,用于概念化和研究先前一些研究中的论点,即技术通过改变行动和互动模式来改变组织和职业结构。基于纳德尔的社会结构理论,本文认为新技术引发的微观社会动态会以有序的方式在不同分析层面产生反响。具体而言,据说技术的物质属性会对一个或多个工作角色的非关系元素产生直接影响。这些变化进而影响角色的关系元素,最终影响组织社会网络的结构。因此,角色和社会网络被认为在技术的结构效应中起中介作用。通过对两个放射科使用传统成像设备和计算机化成像设备的比较实地研究得出的人种志和社会测量数据对该理论进行了说明。