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2ACT: AI-Accentuated Career Transitions via Skill Bridges

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  • Drake Mullens
  • Stella Shen

Abstract

This study introduces the AI-Accentuated Career Transitions framework, advancing beyond binary automation narratives to examine how distinct AI usage patterns reshape occupational mobility. Analyzing 545 occupations through multivariate modeling, we identify six qualitatively distinct human-AI usage patterns that differentially predict placement across job preparation zones. Our findings empirically validate the "missing middle" hypothesis: automation-focused usage strongly predicts lower job zone placement while augmentative usage predicts higher zones. Most significantly, we identify specific Knowledge, Skill, and Abilities combinations with AI usage patterns that function as "skill bridges" facilitating upward mobility. The interaction between task iteration AI usage and cognitive skills emerges as the strongest advancement predictor, creating pathways across traditionally disconnected occupational categories. Counterintuitively, despite directive AI's negative main effect, its interaction with technical knowledge positively predicts advancement in specialized domains. Comparative model testing confirms that AI usage patterns represent a distinct dimension of occupational classification that adds significant explanatory power beyond traditional skill measures. These findings reveal AI as a skill amplifier that widens capability gaps rather than an equalizing force. The 2ACT framework provides strategic guidance for workers, curriculum designers, policymakers, and organizations navigating increasingly AI-mediated career pathways.

Suggested Citation

  • Drake Mullens & Stella Shen, 2025. "2ACT: AI-Accentuated Career Transitions via Skill Bridges," Papers 2505.07914, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2505.07914
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    2. David H. Autor, 2015. "Why Are There Still So Many Jobs? The History and Future of Workplace Automation," Journal of Economic Perspectives, American Economic Association, vol. 29(3), pages 3-30, Summer.
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