Practical Aspects of Knowledge Management: 4th International Conference, PAKM 2002, Vienna, Austria, December 2-3, 2002, Proceedings

Első borító
Dimitris Karagiannis, Ulrich Reimer
Springer Science & Business Media, 2007. nov. 8. - 640 oldal
This book contains the papers presented at the 4th International Conference on Practical Aspects of Knowledge Management organized by the Department of Knowledge Management, Institute of Informatics and Business Informatics, University of Vienna. The event took place on 2002, December 2–3 in Vienna, Austria. The PAKM conference series is a forum for people to share their views, to exchange ideas, to develop new insights, and to envision completely new kinds of solutions to knowledge management problems, because to succeed in the accelerating pace of the “Internet age,” organizations will be obliged to efficiently leverage their most valuable and underleveraged resource: the intellectual capital of their highly educated, skilled, and experienced employees. Thus next-generation business solutions must be focussed on supporting the creation of value by adding knowledge-rich components as integral parts in the work process. The authors, who work at the leading edge of knowledge management, have pursued integrated approaches which consider both the technological side, and the business side, and the organizational and cultural issues. We hope the papers, covering a broad range of knowledge management topics, will be valuable, at the same extent, for researchers and practitioners developing knowledge management approaches and applications. It was a real joy seeing the visibility of the conference increase and noting that knowledge management researchers and practitioners from all over the world submitted papers. This year, 90 papers and case studies were submitted, from which 55 were accepted.

Részletek a könyvből

Tartalomjegyzék

A SituationOriented and Personalized Framework for Role Modeling
339
Instruments to Visualize Design Engineering Working Methods in Automotive Supplier Companies
347
Applications of a Lightweight WebBased Retrieval Clustering and Visualization Framework
359
Facilitating Comprehension of Normative Documents by Graphical Representations
369
A FuzzyGraphBased Approach to the Determination of Interestingness of Association Rules
377
Collaborative Knowledge Flow Improving Process Awareness and Traceability of Work Activities
389
The PROMOTE Approach
398
Knowledge Management for Industrial Research Processes of an Industrial Research Center
413

Creating IncentiveDriven Tasks to Improve Knowledge Management in Sales Chain Relationships
87
Employing the Unified Process for Developing a WebBased Application A Case Study
97
The indiGo Approach
114
An Integrated Environment to Geographic DecistionMaking
126
An Example of Grassroots Knowledge Management Development
137
The MAYBE Method
144
Design Issues for AgentBased Resource Locator Systems
156
Analysis of Clustering Algorithms for WebBased Search
168
An Agent Based Approach to Finding Expertise
179
OntoWeb A Semantic Web Community Portal
189
Web Information Tracking Using Ontologies
201
A DomainSpecific Formal Ontology for Archeological Knowledge Sharing and Reusing1
213
Metasearch Properties of Common Documents Distributions
226
EndUser Access to Multiple Sources Incorporating Knowledge Discovery into Knowledge Management
232
Data Integration for Multimedia Elearning Environments with XML and MPEG7
244
Managing Business Models for Business Application Development
256
A process for Acquiring Knowledge while Sharing Knowledge
268
Knowledge in an Electronic World?
281
A Framework for Analysis and a Review of Knowledge Asset Marketplaces
301
Focusing on KMS Feature Requirements
314
Towards a Framework for Mobile Knowledge Management
326
Implications for the Design of Technical and Organisational Solution
425
Web Based Knowledge Management Community for Machine and Plant Construction Industries Technical AfterSales Service
437
Dynamic Generation of User Communities with Participative Knowledge Production and ContentDriven Delivery
447
Virtual Knowledge Communities
457
Are the Knowledge Management Professionals Up to the Job?
472
A PeertoPeer Solution for Distributed Knowledge Management
490
An Expertise System for Supporting the Sales and Distribution Process of a Software Vendor
501
More Efficient Searching in a Knowledge Portal An Approach Based on the Analysis of Users Queries
513
A Generic Framework for WebBased Intelligent Decision Support Systems
525
Mining Knowledge from Text Collections Using Automatically Generated Metadata
537
Challenges and Directions in Knowledge Asset Trading
549
A Methodological Basis for Bringing Knowledge Management to RealWorld Environments
565
Openness and CrossFunctional Risk ReductionThe Key to a Successful Development Project? Hindsight in Advance within and between Organizations
571
Inspection Process Support System for Software Engineering Education and the Lessons from Its Application
585
CE2Focused Training
595
Management of Intellectual Capital by Optimal Portfolio Selection
613
Integrating Knowledge Management Learning Mechanisms and Company Performance
620
The Value of Knowledge Doesnt Exist
632
Author Index
639
Copyright

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285. oldal - Situation awareness is the perception of the elements in the environment within a volume of time and space, the comprehension of their meaning, and the projection of their status in the near future.
271. oldal - Core competencies are the collective learning in the organization, especially how to coordinate diverse production skills and integrate multiple streams of technologies.
178. oldal - Z. Wu and R. Leahy. An optimal graph theoretic approach to data clustering: Theory and its application to image segmentation.
391. oldal - System (WfMS) is a system that completely defines, manages, and executes workflows through the execution of software whose order of execution is driven by a computer representation of the workflow logic [1].
457. oldal - The notion of community has been at the heart of the Internet since its inception. For many years, scientists have used the Internet to share data, collaborate on research, and exchange messages. In essence, scientists formed interactive research communities that existed not on a physical campus but on the Internet.
151. oldal - Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Step 4 Step 5 Step 6 Step 7 Step 8 Step 9 Step 10: Step 11: Step 12: Step 13: Spectrum Writing Grade 7 Lesson 2 Cause - and - Ef f ec t Relationships Why is milk "milky?
156. oldal - Department of Electronics and Computer Science, University of Southampton, Southampton, SO17 1BJ, UK; email: {sem99r,nrs,dder|@ ecs.soton.ac.uk.
77. oldal - In this volume we consider as an innovation any idea, practice, or material artifact perceived to be new by the relevant unit of adoption.

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