Knowledge Management
Knowledge Management
Knowledge Management
Syllabi
Course Outcomes
Course Code and 309 – Knowledge Management
Course Name
Generic Elective – University Level (GE) Course
CO # Cognitive Course Outcomes
Abilities
CO309.1 Remembering DEFINE the key terms and concepts in Knowledge Management
Informati on
( Data in formati on)
Data
Data , Information and knowledge
Knowledge Management
Quality
Knowledge Creativity
Management
Sustainable
Competitive
Advantage
Characteristics of knowledge
• Knowledge involves human interaction with
reality or information about reality
• Knowledge is subjective to the knower as
person-> individualization
• Knowledge is social in nature
• In knowing something I believe it to be true
– responsibility and commitment
Characteristics of knowledge
• Knowing takes place in relation to existing
knowledge
• Knowledge involves a judgment
• Knowledge has a moment of categorical
imperative(unconditional rule of conduct )
and can induce a cognitive dissonance
Characteristics of knowledge
• Knowledge is always part of dynamic system
-Constantly developing
• Knowledge is gregarious by nature- socialization-
reinforced, challenged, modified, improved and
validated
• Knowledge processes-always a part of open system.
• Knowledge creation is a process of innovation.
Alternative views of knowledge
• Subjective view of knowledge- represents
knowledge as a state of mind or as a practice
• Objective view of knowledge- represents
knowledge as an object , an access to
information, or as a capability.
Subjective View of Knowledge
Subjective Objective
views views
Knowledge as Knowledge as
Knowledge as Knowledge as Knowledge as
a state of access to
practice an object capability
mind information
Types of knowledge
•Shallow and deep knowledge
•Shallow or surface knowledge- minimal understanding
of the problem area
•Deep knowledge- understanding acquired as a result
of a number of years experience and may require
understanding of workings of complex processes
Types of knowledge
• Knowledge as know-how-
• Knowledge based on accumulated lessons of
practical experience
• Needed to build expert systems
• Capturing practical experience requires social
tools
Epistemology- meaning
• It is the theory of knowledge-
– Its methods
– Validity
– Scope
– Distinction between justified belief and opinion
Types of knowledge
• Expert and novice
• Experts represent their know-how in terms of
heuristics- rules of thumb based on their
experience-empirical knowledge
• In building knowledge base heuristics generally
operate in the form of if then statements
Reasoning and heuristics
• Reasoning by analogy
• Formal reasoning
• Exact reasoning/ deductive reasoning
• inductive reasoning
• Case based reasoning
Common sense as knowledge
• It is a collection of personal experiences and
facts aquired over time.
• We take it for granted
Declarative knowledge
• Declarative knowledge may be characterized
as “know what,” whereas procedural
knowledge may be viewed as “know-how.” To
Procedural and Episodic knowledge
• Procedural knowledge an understanding of
How to do a task or to carry out a procedure
usually involves psychomotor skills
• Declarative knowledge is information that
experts can easily discuss.- awareness
knowledge
Procedural and Episodic knowledge
• Procedural knowledge- resides in -short term
memory
• Used to diagnose electrical system of a car by
pointing to causal relationship.
• Best way to capture declarative knowledge –
structured interview
Semantic knowledge
• Deeper kind of knowledge
• Highly organized, chunked knowledge
• Resides in long term memory
• Includes major concepts, vocabulary, facts and
relationships
Episodic knowledge
• Knowledge based on experimental information or
episodes
• The longer a human expert takes to verbalize his or
her knowledge, the more semantic or episodic it is.
• Resides in long term memory
• Its use is automated.- driving
• Expert generally explains by examples/ scenarios
Explicit knowledge
• It typically refers to knowledge that has been
expressed into words and numbers.
• It can be shared formally and systematically in
the form of data, specifications, manuals,
drawings, audio and videotapes, computer
programs, patents, and the like.
Explicit and tacit knowledge
• Tacit knowledge is knowledge embedded in the human mind
through experience and jobs
• Coined by Hungarian medical scientist Michael Polanyi
• It includes intuitions, values and beliefs that stem from years of
experience
• It is the knowledge used to create explicit knowledge
• Also called as whispers in the ears
• Difficult to share across space and time.
• Knowing how
• Embodied knowledge
Explicit and tacit knowledge
• Explicit knowledge is knowledge codified and
digitized in books, documents, reports,
whitepapers, spreadsheets, memos, training
courses
• Easier to retrieve and transmit
• Knowing that
• Theoretical knowledge
Explicit knowledge Tacit knowledge
• Easier to identify • Personal and hard to
• Can be stored formalize
• Reusable for decision • And communicate
making • It is heuristics, mind sets,,
unconscious values
• Stored in human mind
• Vulnerable to loss
Expert Knowledge
• It is information woven into the mind of the expert
to solve complex problems quickly and accurately
• Chunking knowledge-knowledge is stored in
expert’s long term memory. Knowledge
compilation or chunking enables experts to
optimize their memory capacity and process
information quickly
General or Specific Knowledge
• This classification of knowledge focuses on
whether the knowledge is possessed widely or
narrowly
• General knowledge -is possessed by a large
number of individuals and can be transferred
easily across individuals.
• Knowledge of cricket rules
General or Specific Knowledge
Contextual Technical
Knowledge knowledge
specificity specificity
Reservoirs of knowledge
• Knowledge in People
• A considerable component of knowledge is stored in people
• Some knowledge is stored in individuals within organizations. For
instance, in professional service firms, such as consulting or law
firms, considerable knowledge resides within the minds of
individual members of the firm.
• The knowledge stored in individuals is the reason several
companies continually seek ways to retain knowledge that might
be lost because of individuals retiring or otherwise leaving the
organization.
Reservoirs of knowledge
• Considerable knowledge resides within groups because
of the relationships among the members of the group
• Groups form beliefs about what works well and what
does not, and this
• knowledge is over and above the knowledge residing
in each individual member -the collective knowledge is
synergistic—greater than the sum of their individual
knowledge.
Knowledge in Artifacts
• knowledge is stored in organizational artifacts as well. Some
knowledge is stored in practices, organizational routines, or
sequential patterns of interaction. In this case, knowledge is
embedded in procedures, rules, and
• norms that are developed through experience over time and
guide future behaviour.
• For example, fast-food franchises often store knowledge
• about how to produce high-quality products in routines.
Prerequisite to
Experience based
Conceptual Practical Provide
training of junior
Knowledge Knowledge Mentorship
officers
Contributes to Leads to
Academic Experience(Delib
Preparation
Loan Expertise
erate practice) Indicator of
Expertise
Self
Minimum or no Confidence
bad loans
Conceptual Model of expertise
Thank You!!