Country hover
Hover or tap a country to inspect the current metric and move into the country surface.
A global task-skill atlas of automation exposure
AutomationAtlas links tasks, skills, countries, products, and trade-facing technology channels in one public research object. It is broader than a paper companion, but calmer than a dashboard.
Country view
Country hover
Hover or tap a country to inspect the current metric and move into the country surface.
Task-skill structure
The task-skill layer is one of the atlas’s central innovations. Preserving many-to-many links changes which skills look most exposed, and gives the country and product-trade layers a better structural foundation.
Direct consequence
Under the GDP-weighted synthetic global, preserving many-to-many task-skill links changes which skills enter the network top decile and which would be missed under a one-to-one compression.
Network-only top decile
of the top-decile network skills appear only when many-to-many links are preserved.
Mean percentile-rank gap
between the preserved network and a one-to-one compression.
The homepage keeps this compact. The full task-skill surface exposes searchable summaries, selected ego previews, and the broader consequence layer.
Open task-skill structure
Local neighborhood preview
A compact ego view keeps the graph interpretable on the public site without loading the full research network into the browser.
Ego preview: Deliver scripted lines to bring a character to life
This is a website-specific preview of the local neighborhood, not the full graph explorer. It keeps the many-to-many structure visible without loading the full research graph into the browser.
Continue exploring
Countries remain the most intuitive first-contact object. The browse surfaces below keep the country layer connected to technology-bearing goods and to the manuscript, methods, and downloadable bundles.
Browse the release
Paper
The paper page carries the title, abstract, PDF, citation, and curated figure set.
Open paperMethods
The methods page keeps benchmark language plain and limitations explicit.
Open methodsData
Phase 1 publishes small, website-ready data exports rather than the full raw research stack.
Open data