Alain J. Godbout, Godbout Martin Godbout & associates
FILTERING KNOWLEDGE : CHANGING INFORMATION
INTO KNOWLEDGE ASSETS
Journal of Systemic Knowledge Management, January 1999
presented by:
Charantej (PA9015)
Over the years, various attempts at developing a
comprehensive knowledge management framework have
identified that one of the key functions in creating
knowledge assets is the task of selecting or filtering public
domain knowledge in order to make it relevant to the
organization. This paper discusses the nature of the
filtering step in order to define a sound knowledge
management approach.
ABSTRACT
Introduction
Making Sense Out of Data and Knowledge
Filtering
Systems
Knowledge theory, whether from the psychological, the
biological or philosophical perspective have one element in
common: knowledge is acquired through a selection or
filtering process. Animals as well as person uses a filtering
process that determines which pieces of information to
retain. The decision to retain or to reject depends mainly on
the perception of the relevance of the information in the
immediate context. In the model, the receiver is described
as the person who must decide which pieces of information
to add to the reservoir of knowledge called «knowledge
base».
Authority/Creditability
of
Source
of
Information
The receiver is normally better disposed towards
information that comes from an authoritative source. Our
individual experience has formed different patterns of
authority in our system of appreciation. In an organizational
context, authority is imbedded in the structure, the division
of work and the jurisdiction. As a result, we tend to
associate our perception of «knowledgeability» with the
distribution of authority within the organization.
.
Organizational
Biases
The term bias implies a closed-mindedness outlook that
prevents someone from judging the situation in an objective
manner. The key here remains the opposition we tend to make
between the concept of objective and the concept of
subjectivity or bias.
The organizational biases translates into summary judgement
whose function is to reinforce our beliefs. Beliefs do not have to
be truths, they therefore do not qualify as knowledge, but they
are an integral part of our appreciative system and act as
filtering agents in knowledge retention
Corporate
Historical
Context
we will tend to accept information that reinforces our personal
experiences. The process is essentially the same as in the case
of beliefs. The difference lies in the past experience as opposed
to an interpretative construct. Similarly we tend to reject
information, regardless of the source, which contradict our
understanding of history, even more so when it is our own.
Receiver's
Savvy
Formal education is still a process of acquisition of large
amounts of information and concepts
The savvy factor can be seen as the skills of the individual or
organizations who acts as receiver and conducts the initial
assessment of the information. A community or a person
who understands proper research procedures, is better able
to assess information obtained by surveys.
Desperation
Factor
For most managers, the reality of management is conditioned by the
availability of factual data and measurable results. This is true for
most persons educated in the Western set of values. As a result, the
same manager becomes desperate when some crucial information
cannot be found. Under these circumstances he or she will accept
almost anything that seems pertinent.
Filtering
Behaviour
The discussion on human filtering above is intended to
provide a framework for developing an approach to the
systematic performance of filtering in knowledge
management
Based on observations of best practices, our contention is
that the design of a formal filtering process will requires
two steps:
The first step consisting of relevancy screening which
will serves as a means for managing the amount of
information which will be processed,
The second the knowledge appreciation which will
serve to rank or select within the remaining «relevant»
information which one correspond to certain quality
factors.
Conclusion:
Knowledge
Management
Remains
Human
One of the conclusions that can be drawn from this discussion is
that the filtering process will continue to require a human
intervention (at least for the time being). This requirement stems
from the obligation to make a series of decisions to determine the
relevance and create added value to the knowledge artefact
Through a proper screening process, most organizations actually
build up a knowledge base which, when combined with local
knowledge production, will provide the competitive edge
4 comments:
The presentation on "FILTERING KNOWLEDGE : CHANGING INFORMATION INTO KNOWLEDGE ASSETS " has driven our thinking to another arena to think. Specially "Filtering Behavior" has taught the good lesson.
very good filtering knowledge by charan tej...it was a technical but byte interesting to listen...it is like managing information...in excel sheet...
very good presentation on how knowledge filter and relevant knowledge absorb thru screening process...
yes it is like managing knowledge assets..
thanx charan....well presented...!!!
"In an organizational
context, authority is imbedded in the structure, the division
of work and the jurisdiction. As a result, we tend to
associate our perception of «knowledgeability» with the
distribution of authority within the organization." CAN ANY ONE EXPLAIN ME THIS SENTENCE. I WOULD BE THANKFUL ANY ONE WOULD SHARE THEIR KNOWLEDGE TO ME ON THIS.
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