The Event That Changes the Frame
This week, workers at Hyundai staged what is being reported as the first humanoid robot strike in history. The dispute centers on Hyundai's plans to deploy Boston Dynamics Atlas robots on car-manufacturing lines. The union's response was not simply a protest against job loss. It was a formal labor action targeting the introduction of a specific class of embodied AI agent into a physical production environment. That specificity matters enormously, and most of the coverage has missed why.
The standard framing treats this as another chapter in the automation-versus-labor story. That framing is analytically lazy. What the Hyundai strike actually illustrates is a coordination failure of a particular kind: workers and management do not share a schema for what humanoid robots are, what they do to task structure, and therefore what the legitimate domain of collective bargaining even covers. Before the robots arrive, there is no shared competence base from which to negotiate. That is not a political problem. It is an organizational theory problem.
Coordination Without Pre-Existing Competence
Classical organizational coordination assumes that the parties involved understand, at least roughly, the nature of the work being coordinated. Markets price known goods. Hierarchies issue instructions for understood tasks. Even networks depend on participants who can evaluate what their peers are offering. The introduction of humanoid robots into manufacturing disrupts this assumption at its root. Neither workers nor managers have stable, accurate schemas for what a general-purpose embodied AI agent actually does to job task structure over time. They are negotiating a contract for a production system that neither side yet understands operationally.
This is precisely the inversion that the Algorithmic Literacy Coordination framework is designed to describe. Kellogg, Valentine, and Christin (2020) documented how algorithmic systems at work create systematic asymmetries in worker knowledge, but their analysis focused primarily on software-mediated task allocation. The Hyundai case extends that logic into physical space, where the algorithmic agent is not a dispatcher or a recommender but an actor sharing a factory floor. The coordination problem is not just epistemic. It is spatial, temporal, and contractual simultaneously.
Folk Theories on the Shop Floor
What workers and union representatives currently hold are not structural schemas for humanoid robotics. They hold folk theories: informal, individually constructed impressions of what Atlas does, derived from Boston Dynamics promotional videos, media coverage, and management presentations optimized for persuasion rather than accuracy. Gagrain, Naab, and Grub (2024) make the important distinction between algorithmic awareness and algorithmic literacy. Awareness - knowing that an automated system is operating - is nearly universal. Literacy - understanding the structural logic of how that system transforms task environments - is rare and difficult to acquire without deliberate schema induction.
The strike is, in part, a rational response to that literacy deficit. When workers cannot accurately model what Atlas will do to their roles, the precautionary move is to stop deployment entirely. Schor et al. (2020) describe how platform-mediated dependence produces precarity not just through wage effects but through opacity. Workers become dependent on systems they cannot read, which means they cannot adapt, bargain, or exit strategically. The factory floor is becoming a new instance of that dynamic, with the additional complication that the opacity is not algorithmic but embodied and physically co-present.
Why Procedural Training Will Fail Here
If Hyundai's response is to offer workers specific procedural training on how to operate alongside Atlas robots in their current configuration, the research literature predicts that training will not generalize. Hatano and Inagaki (1986) drew the line between routine expertise, which is procedure-bound and context-specific, and adaptive expertise, which is principle-based and transfers across novel configurations. A humanoid robot capable of general-purpose manipulation will not stay in one configuration. Its task assignments will evolve. Workers trained to operate alongside Atlas doing task A will lack the conceptual resources to adapt when Atlas is reassigned to task B, or when a successor model arrives with different physical capabilities.
What the Hyundai situation actually requires is schema-level understanding of how embodied AI agents transform task interdependence structures. That is a harder educational investment and a less satisfying answer for a union trying to draft contract language next quarter. But the alternative is a workforce that wins today's negotiation and loses every subsequent one, because the terms of the production environment will keep shifting faster than procedural knowledge can track.
What the Strike Actually Signals
The first humanoid robot strike is not a Luddite moment. It is a signal that coordination theory has a boundary condition it has not yet formalized. When the agent being coordinated around is itself adaptive, physically embodied, and algorithmically governed, neither classical labor relations frameworks nor current platform coordination theories offer adequate tools. The workers at Hyundai are not wrong to be cautious. They are operating rationally under genuine structural uncertainty. The theoretical challenge is to build frameworks that can serve them better than the ones currently available - before the robots are already on the floor.
Roger Hunt