From Occupations to Tasks: A New Perspective on Automatability Prediction Using BERT
Dawei Xu, Haoran Yang, Marian-Andrei Rizoiu, Guandong Xu

TL;DR
This paper introduces a BERT-based classifier to predict the automatability of individual tasks, providing a more granular understanding of automation risks across occupations and sectors.
Contribution
It presents a novel BERT-based model for task-level automatability prediction, leveraging multiple datasets and expert annotations, outperforming traditional models.
Findings
Approximately 25.1% of occupations are at substantial risk of automation.
The classifier demonstrates superior performance over traditional and transformer models.
Insights into sector-specific automation vulnerabilities.
Abstract
As automation technologies continue to advance at an unprecedented rate, concerns about job displacement and the future of work have become increasingly prevalent. While existing research has primarily focused on the potential impact of automation at the occupation level, there has been a lack of investigation into the automatability of individual tasks. This paper addresses this gap by proposing a BERT-based classifier to predict the automatability of tasks in the forthcoming decade at a granular level leveraging the context and semantics information of tasks. We leverage three public datasets: O*NET Task Statements, ESCO Skills, and Australian Labour Market Insights Tasks, and perform expert annotation. Our BERT-based classifier, fine-tuned on our task statement data, demonstrates superior performance over traditional machine learning models, neural network architectures, and other…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSoftware Testing and Debugging Techniques · Software Engineering Research · Software System Performance and Reliability
