Reference, Knowledge Management, Distributed Knowledge
- Article reports on the development of knowledge modeling tools operating through the web to support knowledge acquisition, representation and inference through semantic networks and repertory grids. By Mildred L. G. Shaw and Brian R. Gaines.
- Multidisciplinary group dedicated to the study of how knowledge is produced, shared, negotiated and co-constructed within distributed communities and the way in which technologies support these exchanges. Features links and tools.
- Section from a management information systems course on virtual teams as task-based groups that use technology to overcome some of the frictions of time and geography.
- Paper discusses the role of authority as a coordination mechanism under conditions of distributed knowledge as well as other issues of economic organization. By Kirsten Foss and Nicolai J. Foss. [PDF]
- Paper describes a conceptual understanding of the relationship between learning and knowledge accumulation and suggests that diversified systems must be able to cope with the need to produce policies that nurture the learning society. By Pedro Conceicao,
- Paper propose a peer-to-peer architecture which embodies the KEx principle. By Matteo Bonifacio, Paolo Bouquet, Gianluca Mameli and Michele Nori. [PDF]
- Discusses the importance of the epistemic impact of the Web. Features bibliography.
- An open source initiative intended to be used to network personal and community knowledge. Features project overview, documentation, news, and contact details.
- Paper presents the algorithms and data structure schemes to be used for knowledge storage and processing by various ICONS components and discusses the algorithms as they appeared through theoretical and experimental studies. By Witold Litwin and Gerard Le
- Research project focuses on six scientific research teams and the ways in which their group history, communications infrastructure, and knowledge interrelate. Features references.
- Paper summarizes kind theory and its use in the Jiki for distributed knowledge capture. By Joseph R. Kiniry. [PDF]
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