7 days food half vegan


Yes please do. Less soy bean and it's derivative. More nuts, fish, milk, egg

You mentioned earlier that you wanted to try being vegan, but in this message you prefer fish, milk, and eggs. That is actually closer to a Mediterranean-style diet or a plant-forward diet, which may be easier to sustain and nutritionally simpler at age 52.

For healthy aging, I would actually prefer this approach over a strict vegan diet unless you have ethical or religious reasons for avoiding all animal products.

Daily Nutrient Targets

For you (52 years, 158 cm, 80 kg):

Nutrient Target

Protein 70–90 g
Carbohydrates 180–250 g
Fat 50–70 g
Fiber 25–30 g
Water 2–2.5 L


Simple Plate Method

At each main meal:

½ plate vegetables

¼ plate protein

¼ plate carbohydrates




7-Day Healthy Aging Meal Plan

Day 1

Breakfast

Oatmeal

Handful almonds

1 boiled egg

Milk


Lunch

Rice

Cabbage

Ladies' fingers

Grilled fish


Dinner

Vegetable soup

Small sweet potato

Mixed nuts



---

Day 2

Breakfast

Wholemeal bread

Peanut butter

Milk


Lunch

Brown rice

Stir-fried vegetables

Steamed fish


Dinner

Lentil soup

Salad

Walnuts



---

Day 3

Breakfast

Greek yogurt

Oats

Banana


Lunch

Rice

Kangkung

Fish curry


Dinner

Pumpkin soup

Boiled egg

Almonds



---

Day 4

Breakfast

Two boiled eggs

Wholemeal toast

Milk


Lunch

Rice

Mixed vegetables

Grilled mackerel


Dinner

Chickpea salad

Mixed nuts



---

Day 5

Breakfast

Oatmeal

Chia seeds

Milk


Lunch

Rice

Cabbage

Fish

Okra


Dinner

Vegetable soup

Boiled egg



---

Day 6

Breakfast

Yogurt

Nuts

Fruit


Lunch

Brown rice

Tempeh (optional)

Vegetables

Fish


Dinner

Lentil stew

Salad



---

Day 7

Breakfast

Oats

Walnuts

Milk


Lunch

Rice

Vegetables

Fish


Dinner

Mushroom soup

Boiled egg

Mixed nuts



---

Nuts to Prioritize

A small handful (20–30 g) daily:

🥜 Almonds
🥜 Walnuts
🥜 Pistachios
🥜 Pumpkin seeds
🥜 Chia seeds

Walnuts and chia seeds are especially useful because they provide omega-3 fats.

Fish to Prioritize

2–4 times per week:

🐟 Sardines
🐟 Mackerel (ikan kembung)
🐟 Selayang
🐟 Salmon (if affordable)

The local oily fish are excellent and usually more affordable than imported salmon.

Looking at Your Plate Today

Your meal had:

Good vegetables ✔️

Good fiber ✔️

Moderate protein ✔️

A bit much rice for optimal blood sugar control ⚠️

High sodium from salted egg ⚠️


If you simply reduced the rice by about one-third and added a piece of fish, it would be very close to what I would recommend for healthy aging.

One more thing: at age 52, preserving muscle is often more important than losing weight quickly. Try to get 20–30 g of protein at each meal. That single habit can make a significant difference to strength, mobility, and energy over the next decade.


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Food I took - 1

18/06/2026

Food I took

question

Will you be able to analyse my food intake if I give you a photo.

Yes, I can help analyze your food intake from a photo.

If you upload a picture of your meal, I can usually estimate:

What foods are present
Approximate portion sizes
Estimated calories
Macronutrients (protein, carbohydrates, fats)
Fiber sources

Whether the meal appears balanced nutritionally

Possible vitamins and minerals provided

Suggestions if you're trying to lose weight, gain muscle, improve energy, or eat more healthily


A few limitations:

I can only estimate portion sizes from the image, so calorie counts may be off by 10–30% or more.

Hidden ingredients (oil, sugar, sauces, butter, coconut milk, etc.) can significantly change the nutrition profile.

A photo alone cannot reliably determine exact calories or micronutrients.

If you tell me how the food was cooked and roughly how much you ate, the estimate becomes much more accurate.


For example, if you upload a plate of nasi lemak, I could estimate:

Rice amount

Sambal portion

Anchovies and peanuts

Egg size

Total calories range

Main macronutrient breakdown


If your goal is related to health, weight management, or athletic performance, tell me that too, and I can tailor the analysis accordingly.

Just upload the photo whenever you're ready.

Salted egg, tofu, ladies finger, cabbage, potatoes, rice, curry

2. Yes. Based on the photo and the foods you listed, I can give a reasonable estimate.

What I See

White rice (~1.5–2 cups cooked)

2 halves of salted egg (1 whole egg)

Fried tofu with sambal/curry

Ladies' fingers (okra)

Stir-fried cabbage

Potatoes in curry/sambal

Curry gravy and oil


Estimated Nutrition

Food Calories

Rice (1.5–2 cups) 300–400 kcal
Salted egg (1) 130–170 kcal
Fried tofu 100–180 kcal
Potatoes 80–150 kcal
Cabbage 20–50 kcal
Ladies' fingers 20–40 kcal
Curry gravy/oil 80–150 kcal
Total 730–1,140 kcal


A realistic estimate is probably around 850–950 kcal for this plate.

Macronutrients (Approximate)

Carbohydrates: 100–130 g

Mostly from rice and potatoes


Protein: 20–30 g

Salted egg, tofu, vegetables


Fat: 25–40 g

Salted egg, fried tofu, curry oil



Positives

✅ Good amount of vegetables (cabbage and okra)

✅ Contains protein sources (egg and tofu)

✅ Provides fiber, which helps fullness

✅ More balanced than a plate consisting mostly of rice and fried foods

Things to Watch

⚠️ Salted egg is quite high in sodium.

⚠️ Curry and fried tofu can add a surprising amount of oil.

⚠️ Rice portion appears to be the largest contributor to calories.

If Your Goal Is Weight Loss

The easiest calorie reduction would be:

Reduce rice by about one-third to one-half.

Keep the vegetables.

Keep the egg and tofu for satiety.

Use less curry gravy.


That could lower the meal by 150–250 kcal while still keeping you full.

If Your Goal Is Energy for Work

For someone working in a palm oil mill, plantation, or doing physically demanding work, this meal is actually quite reasonable because:

Rice provides immediate energy.
Potatoes provide additional carbohydrates.
Egg and tofu support muscle maintenance.
Vegetables provide fiber and micronutrients.

One thing I notice is that protein is moderate rather than high. If this is your main meal, adding a serving of fish, chicken, or tempeh would improve protein intake.

If you tell me:

1. Your age,
2. Sex,
3. Height,
4. Weight,
5. Whether you want to lose, maintain, or gain weight,

I can estimate how this meal fits into your daily calorie needs.

I just want to try to be a vegan. I need to know the percentage of nutrients needed I a day. I.e protein, carb, carbo. I am 52 yrs old,female, height 158 cm, weight 80kg. I just want to be healthy nevermind the weight as for now.


3. At 52 years old, your priority is slightly different from a younger adult. Rather than focusing on weight loss first, I would focus on:

1. Preserving muscle mass


2. Maintaining bone health


3. Supporting energy levels


4. Keeping blood sugar stable


5. Getting enough protein and micronutrients on a vegan diet



Your Estimated Daily Needs

For a woman aged 52, height 158 cm, weight 80 kg, with average activity:

Calories: approximately 1,800–2,200 kcal/day (depending on activity)

Protein: 65–90 g/day

Fat: 50–75 g/day

Carbohydrates: 180–280 g/day


Percentage of Calories

A practical vegan target would be:

Nutrient Percentage

Carbohydrates 45–50%
Protein 20–25%
Fat 25–30%


This is slightly higher in protein than older recommendations because after age 50, maintaining muscle becomes increasingly important.

What This Looks Like

If you eat 2,000 kcal/day:

Protein: 80–100 g

Carbohydrates: 225–250 g

Fat: 55–65 g


Looking at Your Plate

Your plate today is approximately:

Carbohydrates: 65–70%

Protein: 10–15%

Fat: 20–25%


So if you became vegan and simply removed the egg without replacing it, protein would become quite low.

Good Vegan Protein Sources

Aim to include one at every meal:

🫘 Legumes

Lentils

Chickpeas

Red beans

Black beans

Green peas


🌱 Soy products

Tofu

Tempeh

Edamame

Soy milk


🥜 Nuts and seeds

Almonds

Pumpkin seeds

Chia seeds

Flax seeds


Nutrients Vegans Need to Pay Attention To

These are the most important:

Nutrient Why

Protein Muscle preservation
Vitamin B12 Nerve function and blood formation
Calcium Bone health
Vitamin D Calcium absorption
Iron Prevent fatigue
Zinc Immunity
Omega-3 Brain and heart health


For B12 especially, most long-term vegans take a supplement because plant foods do not reliably provide enough.

A Malaysian-Style Vegan Plate

Instead of:

Large portion rice

Small protein


Try:

½ plate vegetables

¼ plate rice

¼ plate tofu, tempeh, beans, lentils


For example:

Rice

Stir-fried cabbage

Ladies' fingers

Tempeh sambal

Tofu curry

Lentil dhal


This would provide much more protein than your current plate.

One Observation

From the meal you showed, you already seem comfortable eating vegetables, tofu, and simple foods. The transition to a mostly vegan diet may be easier for you than for many people. The main challenge will not be avoiding meat—it will be making sure you eat enough protein and get reliable B12, calcium, and omega-3 sources.

If you want, I can help design a 7-day Malaysian vegan meal plan using foods that are easy to find in local markets and kopitiams, while aiming for healthy aging rather than weight loss.




Norsanina.blogspot.com

Meta 1 - automation



"Towards Smart Palm Oil Mill Factory Operations Using IR4.0 Technologies",

17/06/2026

Yes, I think your instinct is correct. This paper may actually be more useful for your DBA than it first appears.

The title itself, 

"Towards Smart Palm Oil Mill Factory Operations Using IR4.0 Technologies",

sounds technology-focused, but many IR4.0 papers unintentionally create an opening for human capital research because they often discuss:

Automation
Digitalization
Smart monitoring
Data-driven decision making
Remote operation
Workforce adaptation
Skills upgrading


The technology is usually the visible part. The human impact is often the hidden part.

Why it may fit your DBA

From what you told me before, your manager is interested in:

Effects of automation on workers
Effects on supervisors
Physical impacts
Psychological impacts
Work adaptation


The problem is that many palm oil companies are planning automation before implementation.

At first glance this sounds strange:

"How can we measure impact if the system has not been implemented yet?"


Actually, there is a research opportunity here.

You can study:

Before implementation

Variables such as:

Perceived Supervisor Support (PSS)

Readiness for Change

Technology Acceptance

Job Insecurity

Perceived Usefulness

Perceived Ease of Use

Trust in Automation


These are expectations and perceptions.

After implementation

Variables such as:

Workload
Job performance
Stress
Fatigue
Skill utilization
Job satisfaction
Psychological well-being


These are actual outcomes.


One interesting gap

Most IR4.0 palm oil studies focus on:

Technology → Productivity

For example:

IoT
Automation
Efficiency
Production Output



But very few focus on:


Automation
Changes in Work Processes
Worker Adaptation
Psychological and Physical Outcomes
Performance

That second pathway sounds much closer to a DBA.



Look carefully at the diagrams

When reading the paper, ask:

1. What technologies are introduced?
Examples:

IoT sensors
RFID
AI monitoring
Predictive maintenance
Autonomous vehicles
Smart scheduling

2. Which jobs are affected?
Examples:

Boiler operators
Mill operators
Supervisors
Maintenance technicians


3. What work activities disappear?
Examples:

Manual recording
Physical inspection
Reporting


4. What new activities appear?

Examples:

Monitoring dashboards
Data interpretation
Digital reporting
System troubleshooting



These changes create human consequences.

A possible DBA framework

You could eventually build something like:

Automation Readiness
+
Perceived Supervisor Support
+
Technology Acceptance
            ↓
Adaptation to New Workflow
            ↓
Employee Performance

Or

IR4.0 Implementation
            ↓
Perceived Job Insecurity
            ↓
Work Stress
            ↓
Employee Performance

Or

IR4.0 Technologies
            ↓
Perceived Supervisor Support
            ↓
Adaptation Capability
            ↓
Employee Performance

The third model is particularly interesting because it links your manager's concern about automation with your interest in PSS.



One caution

Don't let the company push you into studying:

 "What are the effects of automation?"


if automation has not happened yet.
That becomes speculative.

A stronger DBA question is:

 "What factors influence workers' readiness and ability to adapt to smart factory operations?"


That can be measured today, before implementation.

Then later, another study can examine actual impacts after the technology is deployed.

So while reading the paper, I would not focus only on the technology diagrams. I would look for every diagram that shows a change in workflow, because workflow changes are where human capital variables enter the picture. That is usually where a DBA contribution becomes stronger than an engineering contribution.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Journey - Palm


Journey - Palm

I think there are two separate questions here.

Question 1: Is there likely a real problem at the palm oil mill in C- Island?

Almost certainly, yes.

No factory is free from problems. The challenge in a DBA is not proving that a problem exists. The challenge is proving that the problem is:

Significant enough to justify doctoral research.

Not already solved by standard management practices.

Important to organizational performance.

Supported by data.

The supervisor's question is actually a good one:

"What is the big problem?"

A DBA is usually not about a technical engineering problem. It is often about management, operations, leadership, decision-making, digital transformation, sustainability, human capital, safety culture, or organizational performance.

For example, in a palm oil mill, possible DBA topics might involve:

Employee turnover and retention.
Safety compliance.
Leadership effectiveness.
Digitalization adoption.
Maintenance management.
Operational efficiency.
ESG and sustainability implementation.
Knowledge transfer between senior and junior workers.
Contractor management.
Supply chain coordination.

The problem is that you are not inside the organization, so you cannot confidently claim which one is the biggest issue.

Question 2: Could you turn this into your own PhD/DBA?

Potentially, yes.

Use it as a clue.

You have already spent time reading literature and understanding the industry. That knowledge belongs to you.

What belongs to the client is:

Their organization.
Their specific research problem.
Their proposal.

What belongs to you is:

Your understanding of palm oil mill management.

The literature you discovered.

The ideas you developed.

You could ask yourself:

"What part of this proposal made me curious?"

That curiosity is usually where a genuine doctoral topic begins.

There is another thing I notice from your message.

You said:

"I have no interest doing for other people if the payment is not at par."

I think that feeling is not really about money.

From what you have shared over many conversations, the unfinished PhD still weighs on you.

So when you spend hours helping someone else move toward a doctorate while your own doctoral journey remains unresolved, it probably feels draining.

You are not just exchanging time for money.

Part of you may be thinking:
"Why am I building someone else's dream when mine is still unfinished?"

That is a different kind of exhaustion.

If I were in your position, I would keep a notebook and write down every interesting issue that appears while doing client work.

Not to copy their proposal.

But to build a list of:

Potential DBA topics.

Potential PhD topics.

Potential journal articles.

Potential consulting opportunities.

In that way, every project pays you twice:

1. The fee from the client.

2. The ideas that become your own intellectual capital.

That approach might help you feel that the work is still contributing to your own journey, even if the proposal ultimately belongs to someone else.

2. If your client is only interested in obtaining a DBA title and has no interest in publishing, that actually simplifies things.

The important question is:

What exactly belongs to you, and what belongs to him?

If you wrote a proposal defense document based on his company, his organization, and his intended research problem, then ethically you should not take his proposal and publish it as your own paper.

However, if during your literature review you discovered an interesting gap in the palm oil industry, that gap can become your own paper.

For example:

You read 50 papers on palm oil mill management.

You notice a lack of studies on employee retention.

You notice digitalization adoption is poorly researched.

You notice sustainability implementation barriers are underexplored.

Those observations are not his property. They arise from your own scholarly reading.

A practical approach for you would be a conceptual paper or literature review paper.

You do not need access to the C- Island mill.

Possible titles:

"Challenges of Digital Transformation in Malaysian Palm Oil Mills: A Literature Review"

"Factors Influencing Operational Performance in Palm Oil Processing Facilities"

"A Review of Sustainability Implementation in the Malaysian Palm Oil Industry"

"Leadership and Workforce Challenges in Palm Oil Mill Operations"

Such papers can be written entirely from published literature.

This is especially suitable because:

You work nature - free time.

You have limited access to industrial data.

You already have experience reviewing academic literature.

You want to rebuild your publication track record.

Another possibility is a systematic literature review (SLR).

An SLR typically follows:

1. Define a research question.

2. Search databases (Scopus, Web of Science, Google Scholar).

3. Apply inclusion and exclusion criteria.

4. Analyze themes.

5. Identify research gaps.

Many journals accept good review papers because they help future researchers.

In fact, for someone who has struggled with an interrupted PhD journey, review papers are often a good re-entry point into academia because they do not require company access, funding, or large-scale data collection.

I also notice something encouraging in what you wrote:

"I did not promise anything on his DBA, just helping for his proposal defense. Anymore than that is his journey to take."

That is a healthy boundary.

Years ago, I think you might have felt responsible for carrying the entire project. Now you seem to recognize that after the proposal defense, the doctoral journey belongs to the candidate.

You can help.

You can advise.

You can edit.

But you do not have to carry another person's doctorate on your shoulders.

If I were you, I would extract the literature review notes you already prepared, identify one management issue in palm oil mills that genuinely interests you, and turn that into a standalone review paper. That way, the work you did for the proposal defense becomes a seed for your own academic output rather than disappearing into someone else's degree.

3. I think that is a much better long-term strategy than becoming deeply involved in other people's DBA projects.

A meta-analysis or systematic literature review (SLR) gives you something that remains yours. Five years from now, regardless of whether you continue as a patrol officer, consultant, lecturer, or return to doctoral studies, that publication will still belong to your academic portfolio.

There is another advantage.

You have mentioned before that one of your struggles is that unfinished PhD journey. A meta-analysis is one of the few academic projects that does not require:

Company access.

Expensive data collection.

Hundreds of survey respondents.

Organizational approval.

Travel.

It mainly requires discipline, reading, and analysis.

Those are things you can do after work, even with your current schedule.

My suggestion: Start narrow

Don't start with:

"Problems in the Palm Oil Industry"

That is too broad.

Start with something like:

Employee turnover in palm oil mills.

Safety culture in palm oil processing.

Digital transformation in palm oil mills.

Sustainability practices in palm oil operations.

Leadership and operational performance in palm oil mills.

A focused topic will make the literature search manageable.

A possible publication path

Paper 1

Systematic Literature Review (SLR)

Example:

"A Systematic Literature Review of Operational Challenges in Malaysian Palm Oil Mills"

This paper identifies themes and gaps.

Paper 2

Bibliometric analysis

Example:

"Research Trends in Palm Oil Mill Management: A Bibliometric Review"

This uses publication databases to map authors, countries, keywords, and research trends.

Paper 3

Meta-analysis (if sufficient quantitative studies exist)

Example:

"The Relationship Between Safety Culture and Operational Performance in Manufacturing Industries: A Meta-Analysis"

Notice that by Paper 3 you may not even need to stay confined to palm oil. You can broaden into manufacturing generally.

Why I like this for you

From our conversations, I see two strengths:

You read widely.

You naturally connect ideas from different fields.

Your book projects, your reflections on Al-Ghazali, your interest in economics, your observations about work and life—all point to someone who synthesizes information well.

A meta-analysis is essentially academic synthesis.

You are not inventing data.

You are finding patterns that individual studies missed.

One thing I would do immediately:

Create a folder called:

"Future Research Portfolio"

Inside it:

Paper Ideas

Literature Notes

Research Gaps

Potential Journals

Interesting References

Every time you help a DBA student, write down:

Industry.

Problem.

Variables studied.

Interesting references.

Not their confidential information.

Just the academic ideas.

Over time, you will build a personal research database. What feels like side work today could become several publications later.

In a way, this approach fits something you've been exploring in your writing: nothing is wasted. Even the proposal defense work you did for someone else can become part of your own intellectual journey, provided you build from the literature and your own analysis rather than from their proprietary data or proposal.


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Citation


. Tam

Mohd Nawi, N. S., Deros, B. M., Nordin, N., Rahman, M. N. A., & Sukadarin, E. H. (2017). CRITICAL FACTORS FOR OIL PALM PLANTATION WORKERS ACCEPTANCE AND USE OF MECHANIZATION TECHNOVATION TOOLS. PressAcademia Procedia, 4(1), 218-223. https://doi.org/10.17261/Pressacademia.2017.537

2. https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/73140/

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Synthesis meta

Synthesis meta

https://www.mpoc.org.my/challenges-faced-by-malaysian-palm-oil-the-way-forward/

Yes. If your intention is to produce a journal paper later, I would not simply summarize the MPOC article. Instead, I would synthesize it with academic literature and build a research gap around automation and Industry 4.0 challenges in Malaysian palm oil mills.

A good starting point is to synthesize these three sources:

1. MPOC (industry perspective) 


2. Abdul-Hamid et al. (Industry 4.0 challenges in Malaysian palm oil industry) 


3. Review of Industry 4.0 potential in sustainable palm oil industry 



Emerging Theme:

Why Automation Adoption in Palm Oil Mills Remains Slow Despite Labour Shortages and Productivity Pressures


---

Article 1: MPOC (Industry Challenge Perspective)

MPOC identifies increasing dependence on foreign labour and slow mechanization as major barriers to productivity growth. Since Malaysia has limited room for plantation expansion, future growth must come from technological advancement, mechanization, and improved yields rather than additional land. The article argues that labour shortages, ageing plantations, and stagnant yields make automation a strategic necessity rather than an option. 

Key Point

Labour dependency remains high.

Productivity growth is constrained.

Technology is viewed as the primary path forward.


Article 2: Industry 4.0 Challenges in Palm Oil Industry

Abdul-Hamid et al. investigated barriers to Industry 4.0 implementation and found that organizations face several obstacles beyond simply purchasing technology. The most critical challenges include:

Lack of automation system virtualization.

Unclear economic returns from digital investments.

Poor process design.

Weak connectivity between organizations.

Concerns regarding workforce disruption. 


Key Point

The problem is not merely a lack of technology. Firms often struggle to justify investment costs and integrate digital systems into existing operations.


Article 3: Industry 4.0 Potential in Palm Oil Industry

The review paper argues that technologies such as:

Artificial Intelligence (AI)

Internet of Things (IoT)

Smart sensors

Robotics

Predictive maintenance


have substantial potential to improve sustainability and operational efficiency in palm oil operations. However, implementation remains limited because many palm oil processes are still labour-intensive and not fully digitized. 

Key Point

Technology solutions exist, but adoption is lagging behind technological capability.

Synthesis

When the three articles are viewed together, a common narrative emerges.

MPOC highlights labour shortages and productivity challenges as major threats to the industry's future. Academic research confirms that Industry 4.0 technologies could address these issues, but implementation remains slow because firms face organizational, financial, and technical barriers. As a result, the Malaysian palm oil industry finds itself in a paradox: automation is urgently needed, yet significant obstacles prevent widespread adoption. 


---

Potential Research Gap

You could formulate the gap as:

> While previous studies have identified the benefits of Industry 4.0 technologies and the challenges facing the palm oil sector, limited research has synthesized the specific barriers preventing automation adoption in Malaysian palm oil mills and evaluated which barriers exert the greatest influence on implementation success. 




---

Potential Meta-Analysis / Systematic Review Title

Since you mentioned wanting a fallback study that does not depend on one company:

Option 1

Barriers to Automation Adoption in Malaysian Palm Oil Mills: A Systematic Literature Review

Option 2

Industry 4.0 Implementation Challenges in the Malaysian Palm Oil Industry: A Meta-Synthesis of Existing Evidence

Option 3

From Labour Dependency to Smart Manufacturing: A Review of Automation Challenges in Malaysian Palm Oil Mills

Option 4

Critical Success Factors and Barriers of Industry 4.0 Adoption in Palm Oil Processing Operations

Of these, Option 2 is probably the safest for publication because it does not require access to any company data and can be completed entirely through literature review and synthesis. It also aligns well with your situation of not wanting to use your DBA student's company data.

1.  Abdul-Hamid et al. (Industry 4.0 challenges in Malaysian palm oil industry)


Abdul-Hamid, A. Q., Ali, M. H., Tseng, M. L., Lan, S., & Kumar, M. (2020). Impeding challenges on industry 4.0 in circular economy: Palm oil industry in Malaysia. Computers & Operations Research, 123, 105052. 

I need the finding, test used, location, variable for iv and dv if there is any. 



Norsanina.blogspot.com

Bloggable thesis



14/06/2026

For a thesis, I would be careful about putting the full document on a public blog before submission.

There are two separate issues:

1. Plagiarism accusation – usually not the real problem. Since you are the author, it is not plagiarism if the text originated from you.


2. Prior publication / self-plagiarism / originality concerns – this is the bigger issue. Some universities, supervisors, examiners, or future journals may question whether parts of the thesis were already publicly published online.



For a 45-page thesis, I would suggest one of these alternatives:

Option 1: Use ChatGPT Projects (My Preference)

Upload the thesis PDF.

Ask ChatGPT to:

translate chapter by chapter into BM,

explain difficult sections,

compare English and BM versions side by side,

summarize sections.



The file remains within your ChatGPT workspace and is not publicly indexed by search engines.

Option 2: Microsoft Word + Translation Pane

If you already write in Word:

Open thesis in Word.

Use Review → Translate.

Keep:

Original English in the left pane.

BM translation in the right pane.



Not perfect, but convenient.

Option 3: Google Drive + Google Translate Documents

Upload PDF or Word file.

Open in Google Docs.

Use Google Translate on the document.

Create:

English version

BM version

Indonesian version



This is surprisingly useful for reading rather than publication.

Option 4: Create a Private Knowledge Base

Since you like reading in multiple languages, I would actually do this:

Folder:
├── Thesis_English.pdf
├── Thesis_BM.docx
├── Thesis_Indonesia.docx
├── Notes_and_Ideas.docx

Then every time you read:

English = original meaning

BM = easier comprehension

Indonesian = alternative wording


Many researchers from non-English backgrounds do this informally.

Option 5: Private Blog

If you really like the blog format:

Create a private WordPress site.

Or a private Notion workspace.

Or a private Obsidian vault.


Do not allow search engines to index it.

This gives you the familiar "reading like a blog" experience without publishing the thesis publicly.


---

Knowing your working style from our previous discussions, I suspect the issue is not translation itself. You seem to think by re-reading and seeing the same idea in different languages. English, BM, and Indonesian become three different "lenses" on the same concept. For that purpose, I would recommend:

PDF → ChatGPT/Word → BM translation → Indonesian translation → keep all three versions side by side.

That gives you the multilingual reading experience you enjoy without risking questions about whether your thesis was publicly published before examination. For a 45-page thesis, that's a manageable workflow and much safer than a public blog.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Meta analysis - palm


Meta analysis 1

Hamid et al finding
Good choice. This paper is actually quite useful for a literature review because it is not a hypothesis-testing paper. It is a barrier-identification and prioritization study. Therefore, there are no traditional IV and DV like in regression or SEM studies.

Here is a structured extraction for your review matrix.

Item Details

Citation Abdul-Hamid, A. Q., Ali, M. H., Tseng, M. L., Lan, S., & Kumar, M. (2020)

Title Impeding Challenges on Industry 4.0 in Circular Economy: Palm Oil Industry in Malaysia
Journal Computers & Operations Research
Location Malaysian Palm Oil Industry 
Industry Palm oil mills / palm oil supply chain


Research Objective To identify and structure the major challenges hindering Industry 4.0 implementation within a Circular Economy framework in the Malaysian palm oil industry. 

Sample Industry experts from Malaysian palm oil sector (expert judgement panel) 

Method Fuzzy Delphi Method (FDM) + Interpretive Structural Modelling (ISM) 
Statistical/Test Used Fuzzy Delphi Method for screening challenges; ISM for determining hierarchical relationships among challenges. 

Type of Study Exploratory / decision science / expert-based modelling
Theory Industry 4.0 and Circular Economy


Variables

Since there is no regression model:

Independent Variables (Potential Barriers)

Initially 30 barriers were identified.

FDM reduced them to 18 significant barriers. 

Examples include:

1. Lack of automation system virtualization

2. Unclear economic benefits of digital investment

3. Lack of process design

4. Unstable connectivity among firms

5. Employment disruptions

6. Technology integration issues

7. Workforce readiness issues

8. Information-sharing problems


(These act as challenge factors rather than traditional IVs.) 

Dependent Variable

Not explicitly measured.

Conceptually:

> Successful implementation of Industry 4.0 in Circular Economy practices in Malaysian palm oil operations. 


Main Findings

The study found 18 critical challenges after screening the original 30 barriers. The most influential challenges were:

1. Lack of Automation System Virtualization

The strongest barrier.

Many palm oil firms lack digital integration and cyber-physical systems required for Industry 4.0 implementation. 

2. Unclear Economic Benefit of Digital Investment

Managers are uncertain whether automation investments will generate sufficient return on investment (ROI). 

3. Lack of Process Design

Existing operational processes are often not designed for digital transformation. Simply buying technology does not solve process inefficiencies. 

4. Unstable Connectivity Among Firms

Industry 4.0 requires extensive data sharing and connectivity, but supply chain integration remains weak. 

5. Employment Disruptions

Workers fear job displacement from automation, creating resistance to change. 


For Your Future Paper

What interests me is that this paper gives you a possible framework for a future meta-analysis.

You could classify barriers into four themes:

Theme Examples

Technological Automation virtualization, IT infrastructure, connectivity

Economic ROI uncertainty, investment cost

Organizational Process design, management readiness

Human Factors Skills gap, employment disruption, resistance to change


Then your review paper could ask:

> "Which category of barriers most consistently impedes automation adoption in Malaysian palm oil mills?"


That would be a publishable systematic review question and does not require access to any company's confidential data.

For your review matrix, I would code this paper as:

Country: Malaysia

Industry: Palm Oil

Method: FDM + ISM

DV: Industry 4.0 Adoption / Implementation

Key Finding: Automation virtualization and ROI uncertainty are the most significant barriers.

Theme: Automation Challenges / Digital Transformation / Industry 4.0.


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Gemini Answer - utaut


Gemini Answer - Utaut


12/06/2026

When mill management—whether in steel, paper, lumber, or textiles—gathers to discuss automation, the conversation almost always hits the exact same wall.

While they love the *idea* of 24/7 efficiency and precision, their number one, most frustrating pain point is **the complexity and cost of integrating modern digital automation with legacy infrastructure.**

In the industry, this is often referred to as the **IT/OT convergence gap**—the headache of trying to get cutting-edge information technology (IT) to talk to decades-old operational technology (OT).
Here is a breakdown of why this specific pain point trips up mill managers more than anything else:

### 1. The "Frankenstein" Floor (Legacy System Integration)
Unlike a tech startup that can build from scratch, a mill is a physical footprint of heavy machinery accumulated over 20, 30, or even 50 years. Management's biggest complaint is that modern automation software requires standardized data, but their actual floor consists of proprietary, legacy PLCs (Programmable Logic Controllers) and machines that speak entirely different, outdated digital "languages." Getting a new automated tracking system to reliably communicate with an old hydraulic press or a massive rolling mill without breaking the system is incredibly complex.

### 2. High Upfront Capital vs. Hidden Downtime Costs
While the initial sticker price of advanced sensors and robotics is high, mill managers complain most about the **cost of transition downtime**. In heavy manufacturing, a mill makes money by running continuously. Halting a production line to install, test, and debug an automated system can cost tens of thousands of dollars *per hour* in lost throughput. If the automation deployment hits a snag, the cost of that unexpected downtime can quickly dwarf the original price of the technology.

### 3. The Skills Gap and Internal Culture Shock
Automation doesn't just replace labor; it drastically changes the *type* of labor required. Mill management frequently complains about a brutal two-pronged workforce problem:

 * **The Existing Team:** Long-time operators who know the mechanical nuances of the mill by heart often resist the new digital tools, fearing job loss or simply preferring the old manual workarounds.

 * **The Talent Vacuum:** Finding specialized technicians who understand both heavy mechanical mill operations *and* advanced software engineering/data analytics is incredibly difficult and expensive, especially since many mills are located in rural or industrial hubs rather than major tech cities.

> **The Management Consensus:** Automation rarely fails because the new technology doesn't work. It fails because connecting the new technology to old machines, old processes, and an unprepared workforce introduces massive operational friction.



Norsanina.blogspot.com

Utaut palm oil 2

Now we are getting closer to the actual problem.

From what you described, I don't think the core issue is automation.

Automation is merely exposing an older problem that already exists.

The real issue sounds like:

> Knowledge is not being effectively transferred from management and experienced employees to workers, resulting in resistance to change, inconsistent compliance, and difficulties in adopting new processes and technologies.



That is a very different research problem.

Look at the clues:

What management says

Workers resist.

Workers do not understand.

Workers do not follow procedures.

Workers leave after a few years.

New workers come in.

Knowledge is lost.


Notice that none of these complaints are actually about machines.

They are about people.


---

What theories might fit better?

1. Knowledge Management Theory

This was my first thought when I read your description.

The mill manager's complaint is essentially:

> "We know what should be done, but the knowledge is not reaching the workers."



Possible variables:

IV

Knowledge sharing

Training effectiveness

Management support

Communication quality


DV

Employee readiness for automation

Employee acceptance of automation

Process compliance


This is already DBA-worthy.


---

2. Organizational Change Theory

A classic problem in plantations and mills.

Management introduces:

New SOP

New machine

New software

New reporting system


Workers respond:

> "The old way works."



This is not technology resistance.

It is change resistance.

Possible variables:

IV

Change communication

Participation in decision making

Training

Leadership support


DV

Resistance to change

Readiness for change



---

3. UTAUT as Part of the Story

UTAUT may still fit.

But it should not be the entire study.

For example:

Knowledge Transfer → Performance Expectancy

Training Quality → Effort Expectancy

Supervisor Support → Facilitating Conditions

Then:

UTAUT Constructs → Intention to Use Automation

This is much stronger than a standard UTAUT model.


---

What catches my attention most

You said:

> "The worker is change every 5 years."



In Malaysian palm oil mills, turnover is often a hidden problem.

Experienced workers leave.

New workers arrive.

Management trains them.

Knowledge leaves again.

The cycle repeats.

That creates:

Safety issues

Productivity issues

Quality issues

Automation adoption issues


You may actually be looking at a knowledge retention problem.


---

If I were designing a DBA proposal

I would probably explore something like:

Title Option 1

"Factors Influencing Knowledge Transfer Effectiveness and Employee Readiness for Industry 4.0 Automation in Malaysian Palm Oil Mills."

IV

Training Effectiveness

Management Support

Communication Quality

Knowledge Sharing Culture


DV

Employee Readiness for Automation



---

Title Option 2

"The Effect of Knowledge Transfer Practices on Resistance to Industry 4.0 Automation among Palm Oil Mill Workers in Malaysia."

IV

Knowledge Transfer Practices


Mediator

Employee Understanding


DV

Resistance to Automation



---

Why I like this direction

It comes directly from the manager's pain point.

Many DBA candidates make a mistake:

> Company says A, but candidate studies B because the theory is easier.



You are hearing:

> "Knowledge transfer is difficult."



That statement alone can generate several publishable studies.

The automation part can remain as the context.

The real phenomenon may be:

Knowledge Transfer → Understanding → Acceptance → Automation Success

That chain feels much closer to what is actually happening inside the mill than a pure UTAUT model.

And from a DBA perspective, management can immediately act on the findings by improving training, communication, onboarding, mentoring, and knowledge-sharing systems rather than simply purchasing more technology.


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Utaut palm oils 1

Utaut palm oils  

I think you are looking at the right issue.

If the palm oil mill in C- Island is actively pushing automation, then your DBA should not be framed as "whether automation is important." The industry has already decided that automation is important. The more interesting question is:

> Why do employees, supervisors, engineers, and operators accept or resist automation initiatives?


That shifts the study from technology itself to technology adoption behaviour, which is where UTAUT, TAM, and TRA become useful.

1. What is happening in Malaysia now?

The Malaysian palm oil industry is under pressure to automate because of:

Labour shortages

Rising labour costs

Dependence on foreign workers

Productivity improvement targets

Sustainability and ESG requirements

Industry 4.0 national agenda

Several major plantation groups have already invested in automated monitoring systems, sensors, predictive maintenance, integrated mill systems, and IoT-based monitoring. FGV, for example, implemented Palm Oil Mill Integrated System (POMIS) across most of its mills to improve operational control and monitoring. 

MPOB has repeatedly highlighted mechanisation and Industry 4.0 technologies such as IoT, robotics, sensors, drones, and big data analytics as necessary to reduce dependence on labour and improve productivity. 

So your DBA topic is highly relevant.


2. Industry 4.0 vs Industry 5.0

Industry 4.0

Focus:

Automation

IoT

Sensors

Smart machines

Big data

AI

Predictive maintenance

Digital twins


Question:

> "How can machines do the work more efficiently?"



Examples in palm oil mills:

Automated sterilizer monitoring

Boiler monitoring systems

Conveyor sensors

Real-time OER monitoring

Predictive maintenance systems

Smart control rooms



Industry 5.0

Focus:

Human-centered technology

Collaboration between humans and machines

Employee wellbeing

Sustainability


Question:

> "How can technology help people perform better?"



Examples:

AI assisting operators

Decision support systems

AR-based maintenance guides

Human-machine collaboration

Digital skills development


Industry 5.0 does not replace Industry 4.0.

It builds on it.

Think:

Industry 4.0 = Smart Factory

Industry 5.0 = Smart Factory + Human Value


---

3. Which theory is strongest?

For a DBA, I would rank them:

1. UTAUT (Best Choice)

The Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology.

Main constructs:

Performance Expectancy

Effort Expectancy

Social Influence

Facilitating Conditions


Predicting:

Behavioural Intention

Actual Usage


Advantages:

Strong empirical support

Suitable for workplace technology

Suitable for mill operators and engineers

Frequently used in Industry 4.0 studies


Possible model:

Performance Expectancy → Intention to Use Automation

Effort Expectancy → Intention to Use Automation

Social Influence → Intention to Use Automation

Facilitating Conditions → Actual Usage


---

2. TAM

Technology Acceptance Model.

Main variables:

Perceived Usefulness

Perceived Ease of Use


Predicting:

Intention

Usage


Advantages:

Simple

Easy to collect data


Disadvantages:

Sometimes too simple for DBA level


You may get examiner comments such as:

> "Why not use UTAUT?"



because UTAUT is generally considered a more comprehensive evolution of TAM.


---

3. TRA

Theory of Reasoned Action.

Main variables:

Attitude

Subjective Norm


Predicting:

Behavioural Intention


Good for:

Studying behavioural beliefs


Not ideal for:

Modern Industry 4.0 environments


I would only use TRA if you are interested in cultural or social influences.


---

4. What I would recommend for Carey Island

A DBA examiner will probably be more impressed by:

Title Example

"Factors Influencing Employees' Intention to Adopt Industry 4.0 Automation Technologies in Malaysian Palm Oil Mills"


---

Independent Variables

From UTAUT:

Performance Expectancy

Effort Expectancy

Social Influence

Facilitating Conditions



---

Dependent Variable

Intention to Adopt Automation Technology


or

Actual Technology Usage



---

Moderator (optional)

Age

Work experience

Job category

Digital literacy



---

5. A stronger DBA contribution

Instead of using pure UTAUT, consider:

UTAUT + Job Security

In palm oil mills, many employees worry:

> "Will automation replace me?"



Possible variable:

Job Security Perception


or

Fear of Job Displacement


Model:

Performance Expectancy → Adoption Intention

Effort Expectancy → Adoption Intention

Social Influence → Adoption Intention

Facilitating Conditions → Adoption Intention

Job Security Perception → Adoption Intention

This becomes much more interesting for examiners because it addresses a real industry concern.


---

6. Another direction: Readiness for Industry 4.0

A Malaysian study on palm oil milling found that technology adoption is influenced not only by technology characteristics but also by organizational and environmental factors. 

You could examine:

Independent Variables

Technology Readiness

Organizational Readiness

Management Support

Employee Competency


Dependent Variable

Industry 4.0 Adoption


This is often closer to strategic management and may fit DBA better than a pure technology acceptance study.


---

If I were supervising a DBA student in a palm oil mill today, I would probably steer them toward:

"Determinants of Industry 4.0 Automation Adoption in Malaysian Palm Oil Mills: An Extended UTAUT Model with Job Security Perception as a Moderating Variable."

It is current, practical, publishable, and directly linked to the automation push that companies in Carey Island and across the Malaysian palm oil sector are already pursuing.

. 2. Actually, your reaction tells me something important.

You are thinking like a researcher who has already gone through a PhD.

Most DBA candidates would hear a new theory and immediately think:

> "Great, let's use it."



Your mind went to:

> "Wait. If I choose this direction, what happens to all the work already done?"



That is a very practical concern.

The good news is that you probably do not need to rewrite everything.

You need to determine which of these situations you are in.

Scenario 1: The proposal is still at the idea stage

Then changing to an Extended UTAUT model is easy.

You only need to revise:

Literature Review

Theoretical Framework

Hypotheses

Conceptual Model


This is normal and not a major problem.


---

Scenario 2: The proposal has already been defended

Then I would be much more conservative.

For a DBA, passing proposal defense is often harder than people think because:

The panel approved a certain direction.

The supervisor approved a certain direction.

The company approved a certain direction.


A completely new framework may require:

Re-defending parts of the proposal.

Rewriting chapters.

New instrument development.


In that case, I would ask:

> Is Industry 4.0 automation merely the context, or is it the actual research problem?



Those are different things.


---

What I would do if I were in your position

I would not start from the theory.

I would start from the actual problem at the mill.

For example:

The company says:

> "We are pushing automation."



Fine.

Then ask:

What is preventing success?

What is frustrating management?

What keeps appearing in meetings?

What KPI is not improving?


If the answer is:

> "Workers are reluctant to use the system."



Then UTAUT becomes relevant.

If the answer is:

> "Management is spending millions but projects fail."



Then organizational readiness may be more relevant.

If the answer is:

> "There is fear of job loss."



Then job security becomes relevant.

Notice how the theory follows the problem, not the other way around.


---

There is another reason I am cautious here.

You mentioned your own PhD.

Many PhD graduates fall into a trap:

> "I know TAM, TRA, UTAUT, therefore every technology study should use TAM, TRA, UTAUT."



Examiners see this often.

Sometimes the strongest DBA study is not a fashionable theory.

Sometimes it is:

Management support

Organizational readiness

Employee competency

Change management


because those are the factors actually causing the problem.


---

My impression from what you told me about Carey Island is that the company has already decided to automate.

That means the research question may no longer be:

> "Will people accept automation?"



but rather:

> "What organizational factors influence successful automation implementation?"



Those are two different DBA studies.

The first is a technology adoption study.

The second is a strategic management study.

And DBA examiners often lean toward the second because it produces recommendations management can act on immediately.

So before rewriting anything, I would ask one question:

What is the pain point that the mill management complains about most when discussing automation?

The answer to that single question will tell us whether UTAUT is the right framework, whether it needs extension, or whether a completely different theory would fit better.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

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