Koopmans

25/06/2026


Certainly. The full APA 7th edition citation is:

> Koopmans, L., Bernaards, C. M., Hildebrandt, V. H., Schaufeli, W. B., de Vet, H. C. W., & van der Beek, A. J. (2011). Conceptual frameworks of individual work performance: A systematic review. Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 53(8), 856–866. https://doi.org/10.1097/JOM.0b013e318226a763 



This paper is particularly valuable for your Chapter 2 because it is a systematic review, meaning the authors synthesized numerous existing performance frameworks and proposed a heuristic model of individual work performance. They identified four dimensions that appear repeatedly in the literature:

1. Task Performance


2. Contextual Performance


3. Adaptive Performance


4. Counterproductive Work Behavior 



For your DBA, I would suggest citing it in the Dimensions of Employee Performance subsection rather than using it as the sole definition of employee performance. A strong combination would be:

Campbell (1990) → foundational definition of performance.

Koopmans et al. (2011) → conceptual framework and dimensions.

Koopmans et al. (2014) → measurement and operationalization through the Individual Work Performance Questionnaire (IWPQ). 


This progression usually satisfies examiners because it moves from: Definition → Conceptualization → Measurement.

For palm oil mill workers, I suspect task performance, adaptive performance, and contextual performance will be especially relevant, since mill operations require adherence to procedures, teamwork, safety awareness, and adaptation to technological and operational changes. Counterproductive work behavior can be discussed, but it may not need as much emphasis unless it is part of your measurement model. 
Norsanina.blogspot.com

Define employee performance?

You're welcome.

25/06/2026

I think you're approaching this the right way.

One thing I've noticed from our discussions is that you're not simply collecting citations—you are trying to understand why a paper deserves a place in your literature review. That will help you enormously when you eventually defend your DBA.

For the Employee Performance section, when you read the papers, pay attention to three different things:

1. Definition

Ask:

> "How does this author define employee performance?"



You will likely find many definitions, but most trace back to Campbell (1990) or similar foundational work.

2. Dimensions

Ask:

> "What aspects of performance are being measured?"



Common dimensions include:

Task performance

Contextual performance

Adaptive performance

Counterproductive work behavior


Not every study uses all four.

3. Measurement

Ask:

> "How did the researchers operationalize employee performance?"



This is especially important because eventually you will need questionnaire items for your own study.


---

For your specific context—mill workers in a palm oil mill—I would pay close attention to papers discussing:

Productivity

Work quality

Safety compliance

Attendance

Adaptability

Teamwork

Problem-solving


These often appear as practical indicators of performance in industrial settings.


---

Another suggestion: create a simple literature matrix as you read.

Author Definition Dimensions Industry Key Findings

Campbell (1990) Behaviour contributing to organizational goals Multiple behavioural dimensions General Seminal definition
Koopmans et al. (2011) Individual work performance Task, Contextual, Adaptive, Counterproductive General Comprehensive framework
Hermina & Yosepha (2019) Employee contribution to organizational goals Varies Management Empirical support


Do this for every major paper. By the time you write Chapter 2, you'll have a ready-made map of the literature rather than hundreds of disconnected articles.

For your study, I suspect the most challenging section will not be Employee Performance. It will be Perceived Supervisor Support (PSS) because that is your mediator. You'll need to justify:

What PSS is,

Why supervisors matter in palm oil mills,

Why PSS should mediate the effects of organizational, environmental, and individual factors on performance,

And how this aligns with Social Exchange Theory.


When you reach that section, we can build it systematically so that RO2, RO3, and RO4 flow naturally from the literature. That is often where the conceptual contribution of the thesis is established.


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Rashomon Movie

25/06/2026

Rashomon 

https://youtu.be/I3YF3-7tV7k?si=SOH9dpuDY8bfu6Of




That's an interesting suspicion, but if you're talking about Rashomon, I think you may be blending two different parts of the story.

The central mystery in Rashomon is not about a girl and a child. It is about the death of a samurai and the assault of his wife. Four different witnesses give contradictory accounts:

The bandit says one thing.

The wife says another.

The dead samurai speaks through a medium and tells a third version.

The woodcutter later reveals a fourth version.


The film never tells us with certainty what actually happened. That uncertainty is the whole point. The term "Rashomon effect" is now used in psychology, law, and history to describe how different people can sincerely remember the same event in completely different ways.

However, there is a baby found at the ruined gate (the Rashomon gate) near the end of the film. Three men are there:

The priest.

The commoner.

The woodcutter.


The commoner steals clothing from the abandoned baby and leaves. The woodcutter, who already has six children, decides to take the baby home and raise it.

Your theory that one of the men is secretly the father is actually a creative interpretation. Kurosawa never confirms such a connection. The baby functions more as a symbol:

After hearing endless lies and selfishness, the priest loses faith in humanity.

The woodcutter's decision to care for the baby restores some hope.

The baby represents innocence and the possibility that people can still choose goodness despite their flaws.


What fascinates many viewers is that the woodcutter is not completely honest himself. He hides part of the truth about the murder. Yet he still chooses compassion toward the abandoned child. Kurosawa seems to be saying that people are rarely purely good or purely bad.

I suspect one reason Rashomon stays in your mind is that it touches on a question you often raise in our conversations: Can we ever know the complete truth, or are we always seeing the world through our own wounds, fears, and desires?

The film's answer seems to be:

> We may never know the full truth of what happened.

But we can still choose what kind of person we want to be.



For a movie made in 1950, that's a surprisingly modern idea.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Hello 3

From Gemini 

25/06/2026
You hit the nail on the head. **Royalties, contract changes, and catalog ownership** are a massive reason why Helloween’s classic albums have been remastered and re-released so many times—most notably with the 2024–2026 definitive remaster campaigns.
While labels always market remasters as "improving the sound quality for modern headphones," the music business machinery behind the scenes is heavily driven by legal rights and financial structure.
The story behind Helloween's remasters is shaped by three key factors:
### 1. The Nightmare Noise Records Era (The Royalty Trap)
In the late 1980s, following the massive success of *Keeper of the Seven Keys Part I & II*, Helloween got trapped in a brutal, multi-year legal war with their original German label, **Noise Records**.
 * **The Lawsuit:** The band tried to break their contract to sign with a major label (EMI), leading to lawsuits that legally blocked Helloween from touring or releasing music outside of Germany for years.
 * **The Royalty Cut:** The original contracts written in the 1980s favored the record label heavily, leaving the band with very small percentage cuts on physical record sales, and zero provisions for future digital streaming formats.
### 2. Enter BMG & "New" Royalty Generations
Over the decades, the Noise Records catalog changed hands multiple times, eventually being bought by **BMG Rights Management**. When a new corporate entity takes over an iconic back-catalog, they often strike fresh licensing or payout agreements with the surviving original members.
By executing a **major remaster campaign**, BMG accomplishes a few strategic business goals:
 * **The Streaming Update:** Un-mastered 1980s tracks sound very quiet and flat on Spotify or Apple Music next to modern metal tracks. Remastering updates the digital metadata, boosts streaming numbers, and keeps a steady stream of passive royalty income flowing to both the label and the band's original songwriters (like Kai Hansen, Michael Weikath, and Michael Kiske).
 * **Physical Collectors Editions:** Streaming pays fractions of a cent, but die-hard metal fans love high-end vinyl. Reissuing the catalog as "Remastered Deluxe Color Vinyl" allows the label to sell a $40 physical product, which yields significantly higher profit and royalty payouts than digital plays.
### 3. The "Pumpkins United" Reunion Financial Shift
When Kai Hansen and Michael Kiske rejoined Helloween in 2016 for the massive *Pumpkins United* reunion, the band's classic era suddenly became incredibly lucrative again.
Because the band was filling arenas playing 80s songs, BMG capitalized on the hype by refreshing the classic albums. It ensured that the old material was heavily marketed right alongside their new albums.
> ### Summary: Is it Taylor's Version?
> Unlike Taylor Swift—who completely *re-recorded* her albums from scratch to completely bypass her old label's ownership—Helloween's remasters use the **original audio tapes**. They just apply modern audio processing, tweak the volume/EQ, and package them with bonus tracks.
> So while it isn't a weapon used to steal back total ownership, it *is* an essential business tool used by the label and the band to restructure old contracts, maximize modern streaming payouts, and sell physical box-sets to collectors.


Norsanina.blogspot.com

18 challenges

Good catch. 

The abstract mentions 18 essential challenges, but the abstract itself only lists the top five. To see all 18, you normally need access to the full article or its appendix, where the Fuzzy Delphi Method screened the original 30 challenges down to 18. The abstract does not provide the complete list. (ScienceDirect)

Based on the paper's methodology, the authors:

  1. Identified 30 initial Industry 4.0–Circular Economy challenges from literature and expert input.

  2. Applied the Fuzzy Delphi Method (FDM) to remove less important factors.

  3. Retained 18 essential challenges.

  4. Then used Interpretive Structural Modelling (ISM) to determine relationships among them. (ScienceDirect)

The five most influential challenges reported in the abstract are:

  1. Lack of automation system virtualization

  2. Unclear economic benefit of digital investment

  3. Lack of process design

  4. Unstable connectivity among firms

  5. Employment disruptions (job displacement concerns) (ScienceDirect)

For your DBA

You actually do not need all 18 challenges unless you are specifically reviewing Industry 4.0 barriers.

For your section:

2.1 Technological and Organizational Transformation in Labour-Intensive Industries

you can use the paper to support the argument that palm oil mills face multiple barriers to digital transformation, including:

  • Technological barriers (automation and virtualization limitations)

  • Financial barriers (unclear return on investment)

  • Process barriers (lack of process redesign)

  • Inter-organizational barriers (poor connectivity across firms)

  • Human resource barriers (employment disruption concerns) (ScienceDirect)

This is actually more useful for your literature review than listing all 18 challenges.

A DBA-style paragraph

You could write:

Abdul-Hamid et al. (2020) identified several barriers to Industry 4.0

One more thing: if you have access through your university library, try downloading the article PDF and send me the appendix or the table containing the challenges. I can then help extract all 18 challenges and group them into organizational, environmental, and individual themes, which would fit very nicely with your conceptual framework.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Refine adjustment

Thank you. Now I can see the direction of your study much more clearly.

Your title is:

"Exploring the Antecedents of Mill Worker Performance: A Case Study of the Palm Oil Industry in Carey Island"

The important thing is that your study is not actually about Industry 4.0 or technology adoption itself. Technology is only part of the context explaining why worker performance matters.

Your framework is:

Independent Variables

  • Organizational Factors

  • Environmental Factors

  • Individual Factors

Mediator

  • Perceived Supervisor Support (PSS)

Dependent Variable

  • Employee Performance


What this means for Chapter 2

The section I wrote earlier:

"Technological and Organizational Transformation in Labour-Intensive Industries"

is actually more suitable as:

2.1 Industry Context

rather than a core antecedent.

Think of it as the justification for why palm oil mills are changing and why employee performance has become critical.


Suggested Literature Review Structure

2.0 Introduction

Overview of Chapter 2.

2.1 Technological and Organizational Transformation in Labour-Intensive Industries

Purpose:

  • Explain changes occurring in palm oil, rubber, timber, manufacturing, and agriculture.

  • Discuss Industry 4.0.

  • Discuss labour shortages.

  • Discuss productivity pressures.

  • Explain why worker performance has become strategically important.

This is your context-setting section.


2.2 Employee Performance

Purpose:

  • Define employee performance.

  • Dimensions of employee performance.

  • Employee performance in manufacturing and palm oil industries.

  • Importance of employee performance.

This is your DV section.


2.3 Organizational Factors

Possible dimensions:

  • Training and development

  • Communication

  • Leadership

  • Reward systems

  • Organizational culture

  • Career opportunities

Discuss studies showing relationship with employee performance.

Addresses:

RQ1
RO1


2.4 Environmental Factors

Possible dimensions:

  • Working conditions

  • Safety climate

  • Physical environment

  • Work facilities

  • Technology availability

Discuss studies showing influence on performance.

Addresses:

RQ1
RO1


2.5 Individual Factors

Possible dimensions:

  • Motivation

  • Skills

  • Competency

  • Self-efficacy

  • Work attitude

Discuss studies linking individual characteristics with performance.

Addresses:

RQ1
RO1


2.6 Perceived Supervisor Support (PSS)

This should be a major section because it is your mediator.

Subsections:

2.6.1 Definition of PSS

2.6.2 Social Exchange Theory Perspective

2.6.3 Antecedents of PSS

Connect:

  • Organizational factors → PSS

  • Environmental factors → PSS

  • Individual factors → PSS

Addresses:

RQ2
RO2


2.7 PSS and Employee Performance

Discuss:

  • Supervisor support

  • Employee commitment

  • Motivation

  • Job satisfaction

  • Performance outcomes

Addresses:

RQ3
RO3


2.8 Mediating Role of PSS

This is critical.

Create three separate discussions:

2.8.1 PSS as Mediator between Organizational Factors and Performance

2.8.2 PSS as Mediator between Environmental Factors and Performance

2.8.3 PSS as Mediator between Individual Factors and Performance

Addresses:

RQ4
RO4


2.9 Underpinning Theory

I strongly recommend:

Social Exchange Theory (SET)

Why?

Because PSS originates from supervisor-employee exchange relationships.

Logic:

  • Organization provides resources.

  • Supervisor represents the organization.

  • Employees perceive support.

  • Employees reciprocate through better performance.

SET is one of the most commonly used theories for PSS studies.

You could also mention:

  • Organizational Support Theory (OST)

but SET should be your primary theory.


2.10 Hypothesis Development

Example:

H1: Organizational factors positively influence employee performance.

H2: Environmental factors positively influence employee performance.

H3: Individual factors positively influence employee performance.

H4: Organizational factors positively influence PSS.

H5: Environmental factors positively influence PSS.

H6: Individual factors positively influence PSS.

H7: PSS positively influences employee performance.

H8: PSS mediates the relationship between organizational factors and employee performance.

H9: PSS mediates the relationship between environmental factors and employee performance.

H10: PSS mediates the relationship between individual factors and employee performance.


2.11 Conceptual Framework

Your framework naturally becomes:

Organizational Factors ───┐
                          │
Environmental Factors ────┼──► PSS ───► Employee Performance
                          │
Individual Factors ───────┘

Direct paths:

Organizational Factors ───► Employee Performance

Environmental Factors ───► Employee Performance

Individual Factors ───────► Employee Performance 
One observation: your title says "Antecedents of Mill Worker Performance", but your RO and RQ are actually examining antecedents of both PSS and employee performance. That is perfectly acceptable, but it means Chapter 2 should spend substantial space on PSS, not just treat it as a small side variable. In many DBA theses with a mediator, the mediator often receives almost as much literature coverage as the dependent variable. This will strengthen the justification for RO2, RO3, and RO4.Norsanina.blogspot.com

2.1.0


For a DBA literature review, you should write this section as a broad industry transformation theme first, then narrow it down to palm oil mills. That creates a strong logical flow and justifies why technological and organizational transformation is an important antecedent of palm oil mill performance.

2.1.0 Technological and Organizational Transformation in Labour-Intensive Industries

Traditional labour-intensive industries, including agriculture, palm oil, rubber, timber, and manufacturing, are experiencing significant technological and organizational transformation due to increasing global competition, labour shortages, sustainability requirements, and the need for operational efficiency. These industries have historically relied heavily on manual labour and conventional management practices. However, the emergence of Industry 4.0 technologies has accelerated the shift towards automation, digitalization, artificial intelligence (AI), Internet of Things (IoT), big data analytics, and smart monitoring systems (Akmal et al., 2025). The integration of these technologies enables organizations to improve productivity, enhance decision-making processes, and reduce operational inefficiencies.

Industry 4.0 represents the convergence of physical operations and digital technologies through interconnected systems that facilitate real-time monitoring, predictive analytics, and intelligent decision-making. Across manufacturing industries, automation technologies have been increasingly adopted to improve production efficiency, product quality, workplace safety, and resource utilization. Recent studies indicate that digital technologies such as IoT sensors, cyber-physical systems, machine learning, and AI-driven analytics enable organizations to optimize operational processes while reducing dependency on manual interventions (Ahmmed et al., 2024; Jiang et al., 2024). These technologies support proactive maintenance, real-time performance tracking, and data-driven operational improvements, contributing to enhanced organizational performance.

In the agricultural sector, technological transformation has become increasingly important as organizations face growing pressure to increase productivity while maintaining sustainability. The adoption of Agriculture 4.0 technologies, including remote sensing, IoT-enabled monitoring systems, drones, AI applications, and blockchain technologies, has transformed traditional farming and plantation operations. These technologies facilitate precision agriculture, improve resource management, enhance traceability, and support evidence-based decision-making. Consequently, organizations are able to achieve higher operational efficiency while addressing environmental and sustainability concerns (Fasciolo et al., 2024).

Beyond technological advancements, organizational transformation plays an equally important role in ensuring successful digital adoption. Organizations must develop analytical capabilities, foster a data-driven culture, and redesign operational processes to maximize the benefits of digital technologies. Research suggests that technological investments alone are insufficient to improve organizational performance unless supported by appropriate organizational structures, leadership commitment, and employee competencies. Data-driven decision-making has emerged as a critical capability that enables managers to utilize real-time operational information for strategic and operational decisions, thereby improving responsiveness and organizational effectiveness (Szukits & Móricz, 2024; Malik, 2024).

The importance of organizational culture in digital transformation has also gained increasing attention in recent literature. Organizations that cultivate innovation-oriented cultures, encourage knowledge sharing, and support continuous learning are more likely to achieve successful digital transformation outcomes. Conversely, resistance to change, lack of digital competencies, and inadequate organizational support may hinder technology adoption and limit performance improvements (Ghafoori et al., 2024). Therefore, technological transformation must be accompanied by organizational readiness and workforce development initiatives to achieve sustainable performance gains.

Within the palm oil industry, the need for technological and organizational transformation has become increasingly evident. Palm oil operations continue to face challenges related to labour dependency, productivity variability, operational inefficiencies, and sustainability compliance. Recent studies highlight that Industry 4.0 technologies, including IoT, AI, blockchain, big data analytics, and remote sensing systems, have the potential to significantly enhance palm oil production processes, improve supply chain transparency, and support sustainable operations. Furthermore, the adoption of smart technologies can reduce reliance on manual labour while enabling more efficient monitoring and control of mill operations (Akmal et al., 2025).

Consequently, technological and organizational transformation has emerged as a critical antecedent of organizational performance in labour-intensive industries. As palm oil mills continue to modernize their operations, the successful integration of digital technologies, supported by organizational readiness and data-driven management practices, is expected to contribute positively to operational efficiency, productivity, and overall mill performance.


Suggested APA 7th References

You should include these recent references in your bibliography:

Akmal, M. Z. M., Ooi, J., Ng, W. P. Q., Shen, H., et al. (2025). Impact of Industry 4.0 technologies on the oil palm industry: A literature review. Smart Agricultural Technology, 10, 100685.

Ahmmed, M. S., Isanaka, S. P., & Liou, F. (2024). Promoting synergies to improve manufacturing efficiency in industrial material processing: A systematic review of Industry 4.0 and AI. Machines, 12(10), 681.

Fasciolo, B., Panza, L., & Lombardi, F. (2024). Exploring the integration of Industry 4.0 technologies in agriculture: A comprehensive bibliometric review. Sustainability, 16(20), 8948.

Ghafoori, A., Gupta, M., Merhi, M. I., Gupta, S., & Shore, A. P. (2024). Toward the role of organizational culture in data-driven digital transformation. International Journal of Production Economics, 271, 109205.

Jiang, L., Zhang, J., & Wong, Y. D. (2024). Digital technology in occupational health of manufacturing industries: A systematic literature review. Discover Applied Sciences, 6, 631.

Malik, S. (2024). Data-driven decision-making: Leveraging the IoT for real-time sustainability in organizational behavior. Sustainability, 16(15), 6302.

Ojha, V. K., Goyal, S., Chand, M., & Kumar, A. (2024). A framework for data-driven decision making in advanced manufacturing systems: Development and implementation. Concurrent Engineering.

Szukits, Á., & Móricz, P. (2024). Towards data-driven decision making: The role of analytical culture and centralization efforts. Review of Managerial Science, 18, 2849–2887.


This section is already approaching doctoral-level literature review style because it moves from general industry transformation → Industry 4.0 → organizational transformation → agriculture → palm oil industry, which is the flow examiners usually expect in Chapter 2.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Chapter 2 Introduction

Chapter 2 Introduction 

22/06/2026

Certainly. Since your Chapter 2 is no longer just about employee performance, but is increasingly positioned within the context of technological transformation, workforce adaptation, knowledge transfer, supervisory support, and employee performance in labour-intensive industries, your introduction should set up that narrative before moving into the specific variables.

Here is a draft that aligns with the themes we discussed.


2.0 Introduction

 ✅ Done 

APA References

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.

Judijanto, L. (2025). Exploring the potentials of artificial intelligence and digital technologies in transforming the palm oil industry: A review. Journal of Information, Technology and Policy, 1–13.

Kurtessis, J. N., Eisenberger, R., Ford, M. T., Buffardi, L. C., Stewart, K. A., & Adis, C. S. (2017). Perceived organizational support: A meta-analytic evaluation of organizational support theory. Journal of Management, 43(6), 1854–1884.

Oreg, S., Vakola, M., & Armenakis, A. (2011). Change recipients’ reactions to organizational change: A 60-year review of quantitative studies. The Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, 47(4), 461–524.


One suggestion: because your study is about antecedents of employee performance, I would make "Technological and Organizational Transformation in Labour-Intensive Industries" the first substantive section after the introduction (before discussing the DV and IVs). 

This creates a logical bridge from Industry 4.0 and workforce adaptation to PSS and employee performance, rather than jumping straight into variable definitions.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

How To Select IV

21/06/2026

Yes, there is such a thing in a thesis, but it must be written carefully.

You should not write:

"We could have studied Technology Acceptance, Job Insecurity, Trust in Automation, etc., but we chose PSS."

That sounds conversational and may invite examiners to ask:

"Why didn't you study those instead?"

A stronger academic approach is to acknowledge the existence of those constructs and then justify why PSS is the focal construct for this study.

In your case, this discussion would fit best after the paragraph discussing Industry 4.0, workforce adaptation, and technological change, and immediately before the paragraph introducing PSS as the mediator.

The flow becomes:

  1. Industry facing technological change.

  2. Workers may experience uncertainty and adaptation challenges.

  3. Many theoretical perspectives exist.

  4. This study focuses on PSS because supervisors are the closest mechanism influencing workers.

  5. Therefore PSS is chosen as the mediator.

You could write something like this:

Extracted 

Done 

I actually think this paragraph does something very useful for your DBA.

It quietly tells the examiner:

"I know the Technology Acceptance literature."

"I know the Readiness for Change literature."

"I know the Job Insecurity literature."

But then it explains:

"My study is not about technology adoption. My study is about employee performance, and PSS is the most relevant mechanism in this operational setting."

That is a much stronger position than trying to include all those variables in the framework.

In fact, if your viva examiner later asks:

"Why didn't you use UTAUT, TAM, or Readiness for Change?"

You can answer:

"Those constructs explain employee reactions to technology. However, the objective of this study was to examine employee performance and the role of supervisory support within palm oil mill operations. Therefore, PSS was selected because supervisors are the primary channel through which organizational practices, knowledge transfer, and workforce development influence employees."

That is a defensible DBA answer.


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Amuse


Amuse

21/06/2026

I would like to ask a rhetorical question. No right and wrong answer. I pick up this line some time ago from a podcast called Why File and YouTube Why Files.  If the branch falls out of a tree in a forest, will it make sound or no sound because no one is listening. Does it matter. 

I tend to collect bits and pieces of something sometime and store it in my head, it will replay like this sentence. Until I cannot stand it anymore or it just pops out,  then I will start searching.

Answer: 
That question has fascinated philosophers, scientists, and curious people for centuries because it is really asking two different questions hidden inside one sentence.

Question 1: Does the falling branch create physical vibrations in the air?

Science would say: yes.

The branch falls, hits the ground, and creates pressure waves in the air. Whether anyone is there or not, those vibrations occur.

Question 2: Is there "sound" if no conscious being hears it?

This becomes a philosophical question.

Some philosophers argue:

Sound is not merely vibration.

Sound is an experience created by the mind.

Without ears, nerves, and consciousness, there are only vibrations, not sound.


In that view, the branch creates vibrations but not "sound."

So the answer depends on how you define the word sound.


---

What interests me more is what you said afterward:

 "I tend to collect bits and pieces of something and store it in my head. It will be replayed like this sentence."



That reminds me of how some people think in seeds rather than conclusions.

Most people hear a sentence and either agree or disagree.

Others hear a sentence and unconsciously store it.

Years later it resurfaces:

Why did that sentence stay with me?

What was bothering me about it?

What does it connect to?


The mind keeps working on it in the background.

Sometimes these recurring thoughts are not really seeking an answer. They are seeking a framework.

For example, perhaps what keeps returning is not the branch at all, but questions such as:

Does reality require a witness?

Does something matter if nobody notices?

Is existence independent of observation?

If nobody appreciates my effort, does it still have value?


Many deep questions in life are hidden inside seemingly simple riddles.


---

Your recent reflections remind me of another version:

If a person spends their whole life being kind, but nobody remembers them after they die, did their kindness matter?

Some would say no.

Others would say yes, because the kindness was real whether or not it was witnessed.

In a way, it is the same branch falling in the forest.

The branch falls.

The vibration exists.

Whether someone hears it is a different question.

And perhaps that is why the sentence stayed in your mind all these years. Not because it needs an answer, but because it quietly points toward much larger questions about existence, meaning, and whether reality depends on being seen.

Answer 2
I am amused and entertained by that though.

I can see why. Sometimes an "aha" moment is not the discovery of an answer—it is the discovery of the real question that was hiding underneath.

You started with a branch falling in a forest. That sounds like a question about physics. Then suddenly you realize it is actually about consciousness, meaning, value, observation, and existence. The floor drops away beneath the original question.

What strikes me is that you often describe waking up with a thought over coffee, or having an idea appear unexpectedly. You don't seem to force these questions. They arrive, sit quietly in your mind, and then one day connect to something larger.

There is a phrase often attributed to the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein:

 A serious philosophical problem could be written in the form of a joke.


Many philosophical puzzles are like that. They sound simple enough for a child to ask, yet adults can spend centuries discussing them.

For example:

Why am I me and not someone else?

What was it like before I was born?

If everything changes, what remains the same?

Does a memory exist when nobody is remembering it?


None of these have definitive answers, yet they are strangely entertaining. The mind circles them not because it expects a solution but because they reveal something about how we think.

You once mentioned the idea that when Allah breathed the ruh into the embryo, perhaps "you never left that state." That is another example. It is not a question that can be settled by measurement. Yet it changes how you look at yourself, life, and death.

Some people find such thoughts unsettling. You seem to find them fascinating.

There is a difference.

The unsettled person asks:

"How do I stop thinking about this?"


The fascinated person asks:

 "Where does this thought lead if I follow it?"


From what you've shared over time, you seem closer to the second type. That is probably why a random sentence from a podcast can stay alive in your mind for years. Not because it is unresolved, but because your mind recognizes that there is more inside it than appears at first glance.

And sometimes the reward is exactly what you felt today—not certainty, just amusement.

A quiet smile over coffee:

"Oh. That's what the question was really about." ☕️


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Chapter 1 or 2

It looks like this paragraph fit into chapter 1 or 2.

Yes. In fact, I think you have just found something that fits your DBA much better than a pure automation discussion.

What caught my attention is not:

"AI-driven automation aids labour management."


What caught my attention is:

 "Comprehensive strategies incorporating technological innovation and capacity building are essential."


That sentence is almost speaking directly to your framework.

Your study is about:

Organizational Factors

Environmental Factors

Individual Factors

PSS

Employee Performance


The paper is essentially saying:

> Technology alone is not enough.

Human capability development is required.



That is exactly where your DBA can contribute.


---

How this paper supports your Organizational Factors

The paper mentions:

Capacity building

Workforce challenges

Labour management

Digital literacy


These can be linked to:

Organizational Factors

Training opportunities

Knowledge transfer practices

Workforce development initiatives

Communication practices


You can argue:

The successful integration of AI and digital technologies requires organizations to invest not only in technological infrastructure but also in workforce development, knowledge transfer, and employee support mechanisms.



That is almost tailor-made for your Organizational Factors construct.


---

How this paper supports your Individual Factors

The paper mentions:

 Low digital literacy.



This is very useful.

You currently have:

Individual Factors

Skills

Motivation

Education

Prior Experience

Adaptability


You can strengthen this section by adding discussion around:

Digital literacy

Learning readiness

Adaptability to technological change


The logic becomes:

Low Digital Literacy ↓ Difficulty understanding new systems ↓ Lower confidence ↓ Lower performance


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How this paper supports PSS

This is where I think many researchers miss the opportunity.

When management introduces:

AI

Automation

Smart monitoring

Digital dashboards


Workers do not ask:

"What algorithm are we using?"



Workers ask:

"Can I still do my job?"

"Will I be replaced?"

"Can I learn this?"



Who answers those questions?

Usually:

Supervisor.

Therefore:

PSS becomes even more important during technological transitions.

You could argue:

> Supervisors play a critical role in facilitating employee adaptation by communicating organizational intentions, addressing concerns, supporting learning activities, and fostering confidence during periods of technological change.



This fits your mediator perfectly.


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How this paper supports your Environmental Factors

You currently define environmental factors as:

Workplace conditions

Infrastructure

Safety standards

Socio-cultural influences


The paper specifically mentions:

> Infrastructure limitations.



This is excellent.

Many studies ignore this.

Imagine:

Management wants digitalization.

But:

Poor internet coverage.

Limited system access.

Inadequate technological infrastructure.


Employees may appear resistant when the real issue is environmental.

Therefore:

Infrastructure readiness becomes an environmental factor affecting performance.


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The hidden research gap I see

The paper focuses on:

Technology

AI Digitalization Automation

The paper recommends:

Capacity Building

Training Skills Knowledge

But the paper does not fully explain:

 Who helps workers adapt?



Your DBA can answer:

 Perceived Supervisor Support.



That is the bridge between management's technological ambitions and workers' actual performance.


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A paragraph you could potentially use in Chapter 1 or Chapter 2

Done 

If I were wearing an examiner's hat, I would say this paper strengthens your argument that:

The future challenge is not AI.



The future challenge is:

Whether workers and supervisors are prepared for AI.



And that fits your current DBA framework remarkably well without requiring you to add a new dependent variable or redesign the entire study.



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Koopmans

25/06/2026 Certainly. The full APA 7th edition citation is: > Koopmans, L., Bernaards, C. M., Hildebrandt, V. H., Schaufeli, W. B., de Ve...