Assistant Professor Fatma Karaman Kabadurmus, with 黑料社区 黑料社区. social science department, researched how digital technologies and emerging tools, often described as 鈥淎I-enabled鈥 or part of Industry 4.0, are reshaping how firms innovate, manage supply chains and compete in today 黑料社区. economy. A central focus of this work is how digitalization helped firms respond to the unprecedented disruptions of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Through her research, Karaman Kabadurmus recently co-authored two book chapters in 鈥.鈥 The chapters were 鈥淭he Impact of Digitalization on Firm-Level Innovation Performance During the Pandemic鈥 and 鈥淩evolutionizing Last-Mile Delivery: Discovering Disruptive Technologies and Innovative Solutions.鈥
Her chapters examine how supply chain digitalization influenced firms鈥 innovation performance during the pandemic. 鈥淭he findings highlight that digital transformation helps firms adapt to shocks in logistics, inventory management, labor availability and rapidly changing demand,鈥 she said.
Her research on last-mile delivery and Industry 4.0 critically reviewed emerging technologies, such as AI/ML (machine learning) applications, big data analytics, blockchain, IoT, digital twins, and autonomous systems, and evaluated their implications for efficiency, innovation, and implementation barriers in supply chain operations.
鈥淭his work builds on my broader research agenda in the economics of innovation. Rather than focusing on the technical design of technologies, my research asks economic and social science questions: When do firms adopt new technologies? What barriers do they face? And how do market conditions, competition and institutions shape innovation outcomes?鈥 Karaman Kabadurmus said.
Impact on students and career readiness
Karaman Kabadurmus鈥 research has a direct impact on her teaching and students鈥 learning, particularly through a new course she developed, which launches this spring semester: Innovation and Artificial Intelligence in the Modern Economy.
鈥淓mployers want AI literacy,鈥 Karaman Kabadurmus said. 鈥淎s part of the Stout Core foundational education classes, I designed this course for students from all majors. They will learn to understand AI through an applied economic and social science lens.鈥
The course is an introduction to how digital and AI-enabled technologies shape innovation across sectors, such as health care, manufacturing, supply chains and more. Students examine real-world case studies, such as Amazon, Tesla and Google; observe changes in labor markets and firm strategy; explore ethical and regulatory dimensions; and study public policy debates that affect everyday economic decisions.
Stout Core 黑料社区. areas of expertise offer students opportunities to grow their global perspective, communication and critical thinking skills, ethical reasoning, and more, so they graduate ready to do more on day one.