© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 1 CPE/CSC 580: Knowledge Management...

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© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 1 CPE/CSC 580: Knowledge Management Dr. Franz J. Kurfess Computer Science Department Cal Poly
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Transcript of © 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 1 CPE/CSC 580: Knowledge Management...

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 1

CPE/CSC 580: Knowledge Management

CPE/CSC 580: Knowledge Management

Dr. Franz J. Kurfess

Computer Science Department

Cal Poly

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 2

Course OverviewCourse Overview Introduction Knowledge Processing

Knowledge Acquisition, Representation and Manipulation

Knowledge Organization Classification, Categorization Ontologies, Taxonomies, Thesauri

Knowledge Retrieval Information Retrieval Knowledge Navigation

Knowledge Presentation Knowledge Visualization

Knowledge Exchange Knowledge Capture, Transfer,

and Distribution Usage of Knowledge

Access Patterns, User Feedback

Knowledge Management Techniques Topic Maps, Agents

Knowledge Management Tools

Knowledge Management in Organizations

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 3

Overview Knowledge Management Techniques

Overview Knowledge Management Techniques

Motivation Objectives Evaluation Criteria Chapter Introduction

Review of relevant concepts Overview new topics Terminology

Topic 1 Subtopic 1.1 Subtopic 1.2

Topic 2 Subtopic 2.1 Subtopic 2.2

Topic 3 Subtopic 3.1 Subtopic 3.2

Important Concepts and Terms

Chapter Summary

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 4

LogisticsLogistics Introductions Course Materials

textbook handouts Web page CourseInfo/Blackboard System and Alternatives

Term Project Lab and Homework Assignments Exams Grading

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Knowledge RepositoriesKnowledge Repositories

[KPMG 1998]

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 6

KM InfrastructureKM Infrastructure

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 7

KM InitiativesKM Initiatives

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 8

Pre-TestPre-Test

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 9

MotivationMotivation

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 10

ObjectivesObjectives

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 12

Corporate Memory (CM)Corporate Memory (CM)

definition attemptspurposeconceptsimplementation

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Definition Attempts Corporate Memory

Definition Attempts Corporate Memory

explicit, disembodied, persistent representation of knowledge and information in an organization [Van Heijst, van der Spek and Kruizinga 1996] may include knowledge on products, production

processes, clients, marketing strategies, plans, strategic goals, etc.

the collective data and knowledge resources of a company [Nagendra Prasad and Plaza 1996] may include project experiences, problem-solving

expertise, design rationale, etc.

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Purpose Corporate MemoryPurpose Corporate Memory

capitalization of knowledgeintegration of resources and know-howcooperation through effective communication and

active documentation

“the right knowledge to the right person at the right time and at the right level”

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Links in the Knowledge ChainLinks in the Knowledge Chain

list existing knowledgedetermine required knowledgedevelop new knowledgeallocate new and existing knowledgeapply knowledgemaintain knowledgedispose of knowledge

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Corporate Memory ManagementCorporate Memory Management

detection of needsconstruction of the corporate memorydiffusion of the corporate memoryuse of the corporate memoryevaluationmaintenance and evolution

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Corporate Memory Management Overview

Corporate Memory Management Overview

[Dieng et al. 1999]

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 18

Multidisciplinary Perspective on CMMultidisciplinary Perspective on CM

technological (computer science, information technology) concentrate on technical and implementation aspects may neglect requirements and constraints of systems in

practical use

organizational (CKO) emphasize the role of CM in an organization may overlook technological problems, or underestimate

efforts needed for implementation

[Dieng et al. 1999]

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 19

Corporate Memory TechniquesCorporate Memory Techniques

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Corporate Memory ExampleCorporate Memory Example

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Motivations for Establishing a CMMotivations for Establishing a CM avoid knowledge loss

departure, retirement, change of roles of employees

exploit past experience cumulative technical know-how successful and failed projects

utilize collective knowledge for strategic purposes detection of new opportunities reaction to changes

improve knowledge exchange and communication establish venues for sharing information

improve learning integrate knowledge from different areas

cross-disciplinary knowledge exchange

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Knowledge in OrganizationsKnowledge in Organizationsexplicit knowledge

specific know-how to design, build, sell and support products and services

tacit knowledge individual and collective skills enabling the organization to act,

adapt, and evolve

tangible knowledge components data, procedures, plans, models, algorithms, documents of

analysis and synthesis

intangible knowledge components abilities, professional skills, private knowledge, organizational

culture, history of the organization, contexts of decisions, etc.

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Types of Corporate MemoriesTypes of Corporate Memories

technical memory know-how of the employees about technical aspects

organizational memory knowledge about the internal structure of an organization

project memories lessons and experiences from past projects

individual memories status, know-how, activities, relationships of individual

employees

internal vs. external memory indicates the source of relevant knowledge and information

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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CM NeedsCM Needs

organization is also a knowledge production unit not necessarily as primary purpose

depends on size, type, and organizational scheme of the organization e.g. distributed network of consultants

needs of individual users vs. organizational needs detecting the “right” needs can be difficult target users, domains, tasks, situations, knowledge

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Determination of CM NeedsDetermination of CM Needs

stakeholder-centered influenced by the members of the community of people

affected by or invested in the system

requirements analysis early involvement of stakeholders is critical and feasible

most stakeholders are internal to the organization, and many are motivated

most solutions are adaptations or evolutions of previous systems CSCW, KBMS, MIS, ...

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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CM ConstructionCM Construction

sourcesnon-computational CMdocument-based CMknowledge-based CMcase-based CMdistributed CMproject-centered CMcombinations of several techniques

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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SourcesSources

human sources domain experts, experienced specialists, people with

organizational memories

physical documents printed documents, notes, design artifacts, products, tools,

etc.

digital documents reports, technical documentation, design artifacts, email,

case libraries, dictionaries, sketches, etc.

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Non-computational CMNon-computational CM

establishment of paper-based knowledge repository existing documents generation of new documents

synthesis of knowledge not explicit in reports, technical documentation, etc.

improve strategies and structural aspects of the organization

systematic generation of knowledge in an organization

may be the predecessor to a digital CM

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Document-based CMDocument-based CM

comprises all existing documents in an organization may be in paper-based or digital form

organizes the collection in a systematic way indexing interface to manage documents

preparation, storage, retrieval, processing, evaluation, distribution

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Knowledge-based CMKnowledge-based CM

based on the elicitation and explicit modeling of knowledge from experts

may use a formal knowledge representation framework this is often quite expensive

serves as an assistant to human “knowledge workers”

different from traditional expert systems their goal is the automation of a particular task

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Case-based CMCase-based CM

utilizes case-based reasoningpast experiences are collected in a (semi-)formal

representation mechanism allows the comparison of “cases” the assumption is that new problems can often be solved

by looking up solutions to previous problems

helps with the concentration of expertise around specific cases

continuous evolution of the CM through the continuous addition of new cases

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Distributed CMDistributed CM

emphasis on collaboration and knowledge-sharing across traditional boundaries geographically distributed persons/groups structurally separated entities

common tasks, domains

essential for virtual organizations teams or people collaborate on-line

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Project-centered CMProject-centered CMcaptures the relevant knowledge accumulated while

working on a project discussions, arguments, decisions, compromises, etc.

important aspects represent and reconcile perspectives of different stakeholders changes of priorities in the project communication of decision rationales recovery of insights and solutions from past scenarios

“re-inventing the wheel”

example issue-based information system (IBIS) [Rittel 1972]

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Combinations of Several TechniquesCombinations of Several Techniques

informal and formal knowledge representation methods

combination of paper-based and digital documentssemi-automatic extraction of knowledgecollaborative construction of “community knowledge”integration of existing components

libraries, data bases, case bases, document collections, multi-media collections, etc.

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Diffusion and Use of CMDiffusion and Use of CM

diffusion modes knowledge attic

archive that can be consulted when needed collection and diffusion are passive

knowledge sponge active collection, passive diffusion

knowledge publisher relevant elements are distributed to users passive collection, active distribution

knowledge pump specific roles or methods for collection of relevant knowledge active collection and active diffusion

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Diffusion via Intranet/InternetDiffusion via Intranet/Internet

frequently centered around Web servershas some conceptual and technical limitations, but

substantial benefits confidentiality, security, reliability, distraction, etc.

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Knowledge and Information Retrieval

Knowledge and Information Retrieval

traditional index-based techniques are integrated in most approaches to CM

enhancements through advanced techniques ontologies collaborative filtering intelligent agents

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EvaluationEvaluation

financial perspective improve the bottom-line of the organization may be difficult to measure

organizational perspective work environment employee satisfaction

technical perspective transfer of know-how

some effects may not be direct consequences of the CM, but side-effects of its introduction or use

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Maintenance and EvolutionMaintenance and Evolution

should be based on the evaluation of the current situation

addition of new knowledgeremoval or modification of obsolete knowledgecoherence problemsscalabilityuser acceptance

should become a continuous activity

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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Examples of CM MethodsExamples of CM Methods

CYGMAREXMKSMKAMM

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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CYGMACYGMA

Cycle de Vie et Gestion des Métiers et des Applications, KADE-TEX

construction of a professional memory in manufacturingrelies on six categories of industrial knowledge

singular knowledge terminological knowledge (dictionary) structural knowledge (ontology, factual knowledge base) behavioral knowledge strategic knowledge operational knowledge

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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REXREX

needs analysis and identificationconstruction of elementary pieces of experiencesconstruction of a computer-based representationimplementation through a software system

[Dieng et al. 1999]

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MKSMMKSM

Method for Knowledge System Managementsystemic-based decision support methodviews knowledge assets as a complex systemmodels this complex system through different

perspectives syntactical, semantic, pragmatic

different components information (data processing) signification (task modelling) context (activity modelling)

[Dieng et al. 1999]

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 44

KAMMKAMM

[Knowledge Associates 2000]

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KAMM ArchitectureKAMM Architecture

[Knowledge Associates 2000]

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Knowledge Technology FrameworkKnowledge Technology Framework

identifies key KM activities and related knowledge[oriented techniques and tools

personalizationcodificationdiscoverycreation/innovationcapture/monitor

[Milton et al. 1999]

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 47

Knowledge TechnologyKnowledge Technology

(Key: P"Person, K1"Knowledge 1echnology, I1"Information 1echnology)

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PersonalizationPersonalization

sharing knowledge through person-to-person contacts

tools for more effective communication email, message boards, chatrooms, personal ontologies

[Milton et al. 1999]

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CodificationCodification

capturing existing knowledge and placing it in repositories

tools and techniques for knowledge representation generic models

rules, frames, case-based reasoning, ...

specialized techniques task- or domain-specific

[Milton et al. 1999]

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DiscoveryDiscovery

searching and retrieving knowledge from repositories and data bases

tools and techniques from information retrieval, knowledge-based systems, natural language processing search engines, ontologies

[Milton et al. 1999]

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Creation/innovationCreation/innovation

generation of new knowledgetools and techniques from cognitive science,

psychology brainstorming support, creativity assistance

mainly a human endeavor

[Milton et al. 1999]

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Capture/MonitorCapture/Monitor

capturing knowledge as people work on their normal task

tools and techniques from Human-Computer Interaction, AI audit trails, case collections

[Milton et al. 1999]

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 53

KM FrameworkKM Framework

[Macintosh et al. 1999]

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 54

KM ProcessesKM Processes

[Macintosh et al. 1999]

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 55

PROMOTE ArchitecturePROMOTE Architecture

[Karagiannis & Telesko, 2000]

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 56

PROMOTE FrameworkPROMOTE Framework

[Karagiannis & Telesko, 2000]

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 57

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Organizational Memory ContextOrganizational Memory Context

[Abecker et al. 1998b]

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Context-Sensitive

Knowledge Supply

Context-Sensitive

Knowledge Supply

[Abecker et al. 1998b]

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Integration of OntologiesIntegration of Ontologies

[Abecker et al. 1998b]

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 61

Knowledge Task SupportKnowledge Task Support

[Abecker et al. 1998b]

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 62

Related Research AreasRelated Research Areas

[Abecker et al. 1998b]

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 69

The KnowMore System ArchitectureThe KnowMore System Architecture

[Abecker et al. 1998b]

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The Know-Net Intranet- and Agent-Based System Architecture

The Know-Net Intranet- and Agent-Based System Architecture

[Abecker et al. 1998b]

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 79

Post-TestPost-Test

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 81

ReferencesReferences

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 82

Important Concepts and TermsImportant Concepts and Terms natural language processing neural network predicate logic propositional logic rational agent rationality Turing test

agent automated reasoning belief network cognitive science computer science hidden Markov model intelligence knowledge representation linguistics Lisp logic machine learning microworlds

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 83

Summary KM TechniquesSummary KM Techniques

© 2001-2005 Franz J. Kurfess Knowledge Management Techniques 84