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Supporting Knowledge Transfer through Decomposable Reasoning Artifacts
Big Island, Hawaii January 03-January 06
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/HICSS.2007.50840th Annual Hawaii International Conf ...
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William Pike, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Richard May, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Alan Turner, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Technology to support knowledge transfer and cooperative inquiry must offer its users the ability to effectively interpret knowledge structures produced by collaborators. Communicating the reasoning processes that underlie a finding is one method for enhancing interpretation, and can result in more effective evaluation and application of shared knowledge. In knowledge management tools, interpretation is aided by creating knowledge artifacts that can expose their provenance to scrutiny and that can be transformed into diverse representations that suit their consumers? perspectives and preferences. We outline the information management needs of inquiring communities characterized by hypothesis generation tasks, and propose a model for communication, based in theories of hermeneutics, semiotics, and abduction, in which knowledge structures can be decomposed into the lower-level reasoning artifacts that produced them. We then present a proof-of-concept implementation for an environment to support the capture and communication of analytic products, with emphasis on the domain of intelligence analysis.
Citation:
William Pike, Richard May, Alan Turner, "Supporting Knowledge Transfer through Decomposable Reasoning Artifacts," hicss, pp.204c, 40th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS'07), 2007
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