The Relationship Between the SPS-Conferences and the Six Industrial Challenge Areas Within Produktion2030
Paper in proceeding, 2024

In this paper, the 206 papers published at the Swedish Production Symposium (SPS) conferences in 2018, 2020, and 2022 have been analyzed, primarily focusing their relationship to the six industrial challenges identified by Produktion2030. Based on the analysis, ten in-depth interviews with representatives from the Swedish Production Academy (SPA) and industry have been done. These interviews have reflected on the analysis of the papers from the SPS conferences as well as progress during the years of the SPS conferences. The emergence and implementation of the SPS conferences have a similar time span as the Vinnova program Produktion2030. The analysed papers indicate that the focus and development directions of the two have been similar, but not completely overlapping. The close collaboration between academia and industry in Swedish production research is clearly shown by the papers and indicated through an alignment with the industrial challenges indicated by Produktion2030. Of all the papers, 2/3 clearly state such collaboration, and the interviews indicate that the extent of the collaboration is even more extensive than that. The findings from the analysis also include the distribution of research funders involved, gender distribution among authors, and where they are from. Two findings that stand out are the need to more clearly state funding bodies for the published research and to also state more clearly in the papers how, in what way, and with whom the researchers collaborated.

SPS-conference

Industrial challenge areas

Produktion2030

Author

Magnus Holm

University of Skövde

Marie Schnell

University of Skövde

Cecilia Warrol

Teknikföretagen

Johan Stahre

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Production Systems

Advances in Transdisciplinary Engineering

2352751X (ISSN) 23527528 (eISSN)

Vol. 52 490-501
9781643685106 (ISBN)

11th Swedish Production Symposium, SPS2024
Trollhattan, Sweden,

Subject Categories

Production Engineering, Human Work Science and Ergonomics

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Production

DOI

10.3233/ATDE240192

More information

Latest update

8/7/2024 8