Journal Design Engineering Masthead
African Structural Engineering | 07 November 2014

A Randomised Field Trial Evaluating Process-Control System Adoption in Rwandan Structural Engineering

M, a, r, i, e, C, l, a, i, r, e, U, w, a, s, e, ,, J, e, a, n, d, e, D, i, e, u, U, w, i, m, a, n, a
Randomised TrialTechnology AdoptionProcess ControlImplementation Science
Randomised trial shows 22pp increase in tech adoption with targeted support.
Workflow integration emerged as more critical than cost for sustained use.
Probit model analysis provides causal evidence for intervention efficacy.
First experimental study on digital process-control adoption in this context.

Abstract

{ "background": "The adoption of digital process-control systems in structural engineering practice within low- and middle-income countries remains poorly understood, with a lack of rigorous evidence on factors influencing uptake and implementation efficacy.", "purpose and objectives": "This working paper aims to quantify the causal effect of a targeted technical support intervention on the adoption rates of a specified process-control system among practising structural engineers. It seeks to identify key barriers and enablers influencing sustained use.", "methodology": "A randomised field trial was conducted with a sample of 120 registered engineering firms. Firms were randomly assigned to treatment (receiving intensive training and support) or control groups. Adoption was measured via system log data over a defined period. The primary analysis used a probit model: $P(Adopti = 1 | Ti, Xi) = \\Phi(\\beta0 + \\beta1 Ti + \\gamma Xi)$, where $Ti$ indicates treatment assignment and $X_i$ a vector of firm-level covariates. Inference is based on robust standard errors.", "findings": "The intervention produced a statistically significant increase in adoption. The estimated average treatment effect was 22 percentage points (95% CI: 14, 30). Qualitative data highlighted the critical role of perceived workflow integration over cost considerations for sustained use.", "conclusion": "Targeted, practical support can substantially increase the uptake of digital process-control technologies in this context, but long-term adoption is contingent on perceived compatibility with existing workflows.", "recommendations": "Implementation programmes should prioritise hands-on, workflow-integrated training over theoretical instruction. Policymakers and professional bodies should consider subsidising initial technical support to catalyse adoption.", "key words": "technology adoption, randomised controlled trial, structural engineering, process control, East Africa, digitalisation", "contribution statement": "This paper provides the first experimental evidence on the efficacy of an intervention designed to increase the adoption of a digital process-control system in a sub-Saharan African engineering context."