Difference between revisions of "Knowledge process"

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[[Storage]] and [[Retention]]: {{Storage}}
 
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[[Representation]]: {{Representation}}
 
[[Representation]]: {{Representation}}

Revision as of 14:44, 5 August 2013

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Definition

Knowledge process is Knowledge process is a process that acts on /or with knowledge, either individual knowledge or organizational knowledge.

Source: [[]]

Summary

One paragaph summary which summarises the main ideas of the article.

Description

Description 1

The following basic processes are the focus of KM activities and must be considered from a KP perspective in the organizational context:

  • Identification;
  • Capture;
  • Generation or creation;
  • Processing and transformation;
  • Storage and retention;
  • Search and retrieval;
  • Representation;
  • Transfer and exchange;
  • Maintenance and updating.

These processes may occur in different sequences. A brief definition of each of the basic knowledge processes follows:

Identification: The process of distinguishing which knowledge should be or has been captured, processed, maintained and preserved. It considers how such knowledge will be identified, and how changes over time will be identified.

Capture: The knowledge process that brings data, information, or knowledge into the organizational knowledge base. A process of capturing the knowledge available within an organization and making it available.

Generation or Creation: Template:Generation

Processing and Transformation: Template:Processing

Storage and Retention: Template:Storage

Search and Retrieval: Search is the process of locating explicit knowledge.

Representation: Template:Representation

Transfer and Exchange: Template:Transfer

Maintenance and Updating: The process of keeping knowledge in good condition, complete, current and usable


Source: Comparative Analysis of Methods and Tools for Nuclear Knowledge Preservation

References

Related articles