Barley S R
Adm Sci Q. 1986 Mar;31(1):78-108.
New medical imaging devices, such as the CT scanner, have begun to challenge traditional role relations among radiologists and radiological technologists. Under some conditions, these technologies may actually alter the organizational and occupational structure of radiological work. However, current theories of technology and organizational form are insensitive to the potential number of structural variations implicit in role-based change. This paper expands recent sociological thought on the link between institution and action to outline a theory of how technology might occasion different organizational structures by altering institutionalized roles and patterns of interaction. In so doing, technology is treated as a social rather than a physical object, and structure is conceptualized as a process rather than an entity. The implications of the theory are illustrated by showing how identical CT scanners occasioned similar structuring processes in two radiology departments and yet led to divergent forms of organization. The data suggest that to understand how technologies alter organizational structures researchers may need to integrate the study of social action and the study of social form.
新的医学成像设备,如CT扫描仪,已开始挑战放射科医生和放射技师之间传统的角色关系。在某些情况下,这些技术实际上可能改变放射工作的组织和职业结构。然而,当前的技术与组织形式理论对基于角色的变化中隐含的潜在结构变化数量并不敏感。本文扩展了近期关于制度与行动之间联系的社会学思想,以勾勒出一种理论,即技术如何通过改变制度化角色和互动模式而引发不同的组织结构。在此过程中,技术被视为一种社会对象而非物理对象,结构被概念化为一个过程而非一个实体。通过展示相同的CT扫描仪如何在两个放射科引发相似的结构化过程,但却导致不同的组织形式,来说明该理论的含义。数据表明,为了理解技术如何改变组织结构,研究人员可能需要将社会行动研究和社会形式研究结合起来。