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COMP3740 CR32: Knowledge Management and Adaptive Systems

COMP3740 CR32: Knowledge Management and Adaptive Systems. Organisational Knowledge Management By Eric Atwell, School of Computing, University of Leeds (including re-use of teaching resources from other sources, esp. Stuart Roberts, School of Computing, Univ of Leeds).

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COMP3740 CR32: Knowledge Management and Adaptive Systems

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  1. COMP3740 CR32:Knowledge Managementand Adaptive Systems Organisational Knowledge Management By Eric Atwell, School of Computing, University of Leeds (including re-use of teaching resources from other sources, esp. Stuart Roberts, School of Computing, Univ of Leeds)

  2. “On completion of this module, students should be able to: … understand the nature and importance of different types of knowledge, including organisational knowledge; …” … recap … Module Objectives include …

  3. Three meanings: the state of knowing or to be acquainted or familiar with (“know about”) the capacity for action (“know how”) codified, captured and accumulated facts, methods, principles and techniques. Based on: F Nickols, The Knowledge in Knowledge Management. KM Handbook. Knowledge in Knowledge Management

  4. From Information to Knowledge Belief-Structuring KNOWLEDGE high Cognitive-Structuring * beliefs* justification INFORMATION Order/Structure * meaning* significance Physical-Structuring DATA * sensing* selecting low SIGNALS low Human Agency high

  5. Google finds hits, ORDERED using lots of metrics eg no of links TO and FROM each page Finds html pages, also ppt, images, maps Google has other tools: scholar, books, code, labs We looked at basic maths: compute many weights, add/multiply together … Google API can be called by a program, to find hits and download them to a CORPUS; BootCat can use a SEED-LIST of many more than 10 keywords Google practice and theory

  6. The view of knowledge taken in this module is a very narrow one, motivated by those KM tasks that can be aided by technology. This lecture attempts to redress this imbalance a little by showing that KM is more than simply a technical issue. Organisational Knowledge

  7. “It could be argued that the concept of knowledge management either is an oxymoron.. or misleading..” Alvesson and Karreman, “Odd Couple: Making sense of the curious concept of knowledge management”, J Man Studies, 38:7, 995-1018, Nov 2001. “You cannot manage knowledge any more than you can manage love or friendship or religion” Stephen Denning, World Bank Knowledge Management

  8. LDOCE: oxymoron: a deliberate combination of two words that seem to mean the opposite of each other, such as ‘you’ve got to be cruel to be kind’ Oxymoron

  9. What is known or knowable “Most organizations have a far richer store of ..knowledge than is ever utilized for the benefit of the enterprise as a whole, because it is piecemeal, is dispersed throughout the organization and is held principally as unrecorded impressions and insights in the heads of individuals”. Organisational Knowledge

  10. “Programmed” information (explicit/implicit) operational, transaction-oriented systems; databases, information systems, decision-support systems. text, if searched using IR/IE (or text analytics – NLP) “Non-programmed information” (tacit, cultural) “intelligence” (in the military sense); strategic knowledge (“know why” and “know when”); gained through casual interaction; “unpremeditated information”. Organisational Knowledge

  11. Individual – explicit AND tacit Culture – shared beliefs, norm, values Ecology – eg the trend towards open plan offices attempts to promote knowledge sharing Where is human knowledge stored?

  12. Where corporate knowledge resides Delphi Group 2000 survey of 700 US companies

  13. 2/3 of knowledge is NOT in electronic form Of the remainder, 2/3 is in “documents”: English text 1/3 of 1/3 (12%) is in “knowledge bases”: data with structure , eg Databases XML (HTML, SGML,…) tagged text/data Knowledge representation formalisms, eg predicate logic, ONTOLOGIES, DATR, RDF, OWL, semantic networks KM Consultants must know lots of terminology ! Knowledge Bases

  14. Knowledge management revolves around a number of processes which typically include: Knowledge gathering: creation and acquisition Knowledge organising and storage Knowledge refining: finding patterns, clusters, … Knowledge transfer and use Process view of KM

  15. Example process view: The processes suggested by Coleman are: 1 Gathering – process of bringing information and data into the system; 2. Organising and storage – process of associating items to subjects, giving them a context, making them easier to find; 3. Refining – process of adding value by discovering relationships, abstracting, synthesis and sharing; 4. Disseminating – process of getting knowledge to those who can use it. Coleman D, “Collaborating on the Internet and Intranets”, Proc. Hawaii International Conference on Systems Sciences, IEEE Computer Society, 2:350-8, 1997

  16. Coleman’s KM processes: examples Can you give examples of Coleman’s processes in teaching and research in the School of Computing? Knowledge gathering: creation and acquisition Knowledge organising and storage Knowledge refining: finding patterns, clusters, … Knowledge transfer and use Can you give examples in use of a specific KM IT system, eg Leeds Uni library catalogue?

  17. Socialisation: (tacit  tacit) Tacit knowledge acquired through shared experiences Externalisation: (tacit  explicit) Converting tacit (implicit) knowledge to explicit through use of abstractions, metaphors, analogies and models Combination: (explicit  explicit) Creating new explicit knowledge by bringing together knowledge from different sources. Internalisation: (explicit  tacit) Embodying explicit knowledge into the shared mental models and work practices of the organisation. People-oriented Knowledge Creation

  18. Personal (Tacit) Knowledge Proprietary (Explicit) Knowledge Public(Explicit) Knowledge Common Sense(Cultural) Knowledge Knowledge diffusion: a 3-D Model Codified Abstract Uncodified Concrete Undiffused Diffused

  19. Tacit, explicit and cultural knowledge combine: architect understands what is aesthetically pleasing (tacit ) material characteristics (explicit) norms and conventions of their profession (cultural) driving a car clutch control (tacit ‘know how’) highway code (explicit) when to bend the rules (cultural) Knowledge Utilisation

  20. More and more work is ‘knowledge work’, less and less is manual work. In 1920 the ratio of manual work to knowledge work was 2:1. By 1980 it was the other way round Data, information, knowledge – these are the resources needed for knowledge work. Fred Nickols, “What Is” in the World of Work and Working: Some implications of the Shift to Knowledge Work, in “The Knowledge Management Yearbook 2001-2002”, JW Cortada and JA Woods (Eds), Butterworth Heinmann Why is ‘KM’ important?

  21. The basic economic resource is no longer capital, nor natural resources, nor labour. It is and will be knowledge. Value is now created by productivity and innovation, both applications of knowledge at work. Peter Drucker, Post-Capitalist Society (1993) Knowledge is power In a competitive environment individuals may not be open to sharing their knowledge. For example: try to find out how Google works… Knowledge is a resource

  22. First generation computer systems replaced manual with IT-based procedures. Databases and data communications led to availability of better Information for decision-making. “Information Management” foregrounded. “Knowledge management” changes the focus from the technology to the organisation. Increases differentiation. This, coupled with the importance of adaptability leads to the idea of the ‘learning organisation’. KM provides the competitive edge

  23. Knowledge Management is more than an IT issue. Computer technology can help to: organise, analyse and make accessible the information from which knowledge derives Integrate disparate information sources aid articulation of tacit knowledge aid knowledge diffusion, sharing and cooperative working discover knowledge in the form of patterns and abstractions Use of IT

  24. Does an organisation hold any knowledge that is not associated with individuals? Is knowledge a resource? How does it differ from other managed resources? Is there more to KM than “(managing) the infrastructure and work environment to help exchange, flow and capture what people know”? Which of Coleman’s processes could be aided by IT? Can you give examples of Coleman’s processes in a specific Knowledge Management scenario? Issues to think about…

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