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KNOWLEDGE-BASED INFORMATION SYSTEMS. OBJECTIVES. Why do businesses today need knowledge management programs and systems for knowledge management? Which information system applications are most useful for distributing, creating, and sharing knowledge in the firm? continued.
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OBJECTIVES • Why do businesses today need knowledge management programs and systems for knowledge management? • Which information system applications are most useful for distributing, creating, and sharing knowledge in the firm? continued
OBJECTIVES (continued) • What are the business benefits of using artificial intelligence technology for knowledge management? • How can businesses use expert systems and case-based reasoning to capture knowledge? • How can organizations benefit from using neural networks and other intelligent techniques?
MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES • Designing knowledge systems that genuinely enhance organizational performance • Identifying and implementing appropriate organizational applications for artificial intelligence
14.1 KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT IN THE ORGANIZATION Organizational Learning and Knowledge Management • Knowledge Assets • Organizational knowledge regarding how to efficiently and effectively perform business processes and create new products and services that enable the business to create value
14.1 KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT IN THE ORGANIZATION Organizational Learning and Knowledge Management • Organizational Learning • Creation of new standard operating procedures and business processes reflecting experience • Knowledge Management • Set of processes developed to create, gather, store, maintain, and apply the firm’s knowledge
14.1 KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT IN THE ORGANIZATION Organizational Learning and Knowledge Management • Chief Knowledge Officer (CKO) • Senior executive in charge of organization’s knowledge management program
14.1 KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT IN THE ORGANIZATION Systems and Infrastructure for Knowledge Management • Tacit Knowledge • Expertise and experience not formally documented • Best Practices • Successful solutions or problem-solving methods developed by specific organization or industry
14.1 KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT IN THE ORGANIZATION Systems and Infrastructure for Knowledge Management • Organizational Memory • Stored learning from organization’s history • Used for decision making and other purposes
14.1 KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT IN THE ORGANIZATION Systems and Infrastructure for Knowledge Management
14.2 INFORMATION AND KNOWLEDGE WORK SYSTEMS • Information Work • Consists of creating or processing information • Data Workers • Personnel, such as secretaries, who process and disseminate the organization’s information and paperwork • Knowledge Workers • Professionals, such as engineers, who design products or services, or create knowledge
14.2 INFORMATION AND KNOWLEDGE WORK SYSTEMS Distributing Knowledge: Office and Document Management Systems • Office Systems • Manage and coordinate work of data and knowledge workers • Connect work of local information workers with all levels and functions of organization • Connect organization to external world • Example: Word processing, voice mail, and imaging
14.2 INFORMATION AND KNOWLEDGE WORK SYSTEMS Distributing Knowledge: Office and Document Management Systems
14.2 INFORMATION AND KNOWLEDGE WORK SYSTEMS Distributing Knowledge: Office and Document Management Systems
14.2 INFORMATION AND KNOWLEDGE WORK SYSTEMS Distributing Knowledge: Office and Document Management Systems Document Imaging Systems • Convert documents and images into digital form • Can be stored and accessed by the computer Knowledge Repository • Documented knowledge in a single location
14.2 INFORMATION AND KNOWLEDGE WORK SYSTEMS Distributing Knowledge: Office and Document Management Systems
14.2 INFORMATION AND KNOWLEDGE WORK SYSTEMS Distributing Knowledge: Office and Document Management Systems
14.2 INFORMATION AND KNOWLEDGE WORK SYSTEMS Creating Knowledge: Knowledge Work Systems Knowledge Work Systems (KWS) • Aid knowledge workers in creation and integration of new knowledge • Specialized tools for specific types of knowledge work • User-friendly interface
14.2 INFORMATION AND KNOWLEDGE WORK SYSTEMS Creating Knowledge: Knowledge Work Systems
14.2 INFORMATION AND KNOWLEDGE WORK SYSTEMS Creating Knowledge: Knowledge Work Systems
14.2 INFORMATION AND KNOWLEDGE WORK SYSTEMS Creating Knowledge: Knowledge Work Systems Examples of Knowledge Work Systems • Computer-aided design (CAD) • Virtual reality systems • Virtual Reality Modeling Language (VRML) • Investment workstations
14.2 INFORMATION AND KNOWLEDGE WORK SYSTEMS Creating Knowledge: Knowledge Work Systems
14.2 INFORMATION AND KNOWLEDGE WORK SYSTEMS Sharing Knowledge: Group Collaboration Systems and Enterprise Knowledge Environments • Groupware • Intranets and Enterprise Knowledge Environments • Enterprise information portals • Teamware
14.2 INFORMATION AND KNOWLEDGE WORK SYSTEMS Intranets and Enterprise Knowledge Environments Knowledge Map • Tool for identifying and locating the organization’s knowledge resources Enterprise Information Portal • Application that enables companies to provide users with a single gateway to internal and external sources of information
14.2 INFORMATION AND KNOWLEDGE WORK SYSTEMS Intranets and Enterprise Knowledge Environments
14.2 INFORMATION AND KNOWLEDGE WORK SYSTEMS Intranets and Enterprise Knowledge Environments Figure 14.9 An Enterprise Information Portal
14.3 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE What is Artificial Intelligence? Artificial Intelligence • Effort to develop computer-based systems that behave like humans • Ability to learn language, accomplish physical tasks, use a perceptual apparatus, and emulate human expertise and decision making
14.3 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE What is Artificial Intelligence?
14.3 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE Why Business is Interested in Artificial Intelligence Artificial Intelligence: • Stores information in active form • Creates mechanism not subjected to human feelings • Eliminates routine and unsatisfying jobs • Enhances organization’s knowledge base by generating solutions to specific problems
14.3 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE Capturing Knowledge: Expert Systems Expert System • Knowledge-intensive computer program that captures the expertise of a human in limited domains of knowledge Knowledge Base • Model of human knowledge that is used by expert system
14.3 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE Capturing Knowledge: Expert Systems How Expert Systems Work • Rule-Based Expert System • An AI program that has a large number of interconnected and nested IF-THEN statements or rules that are the basis for the knowledge • Rule Base • The collection of knowledge in an AI system, represented by IF-THEN statements • AI Shell • The programming environment of an expert system continued
14.3 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE Capturing Knowledge: Expert Systems
14.3 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE Capturing Knowledge: Expert Systems How Expert Systems Work (continued) • Inference Engine • The strategy used to search through the rule base in an expert system • Can be forward or backward chaining
14.3 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE Capturing Knowledge: Expert Systems
14.3 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE Capturing Knowledge: Expert Systems Strategies for Searching the Rule Base • Forward Chaining • begins with the information entered by the user and searches the rule base to arrive at a conclusion • Backward Chaining • acts like a problem solver • begins with a hypothesis and seeks out more information until the hypothesis is either proven or disproved
14.3 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE Capturing Knowledge: Expert Systems Knowledge Engineer • Specialist eliciting information and expertise from other professionals • Translates information into set of rules for an expert system
14.3 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE Organizational Intelligence: Case-Based Reasoning Case-Based Reasoning (CBR) • Captures and stores collective knowledge • Represents knowledge as database of cases and solutions
14.3 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE Organizational Intelligence: Case-Based Reasoning
14.4 OTHER INTELLIGENT TECHNIQUES Neural Networks • Hardware or software emulating processing patterns of a biological brain • Put intelligence into hardware in form of a generalized capability to learn
14.4 OTHER INTELLIGENT TECHNIQUES Fuzzy Logic • Rule-based AI • Tolerates imprecision • Uses nonspecific terms called membership functions to solve problems
14. 4 OTHER INTELLIGENT TECHNIQUES Genetic Algorithms • Problem-solving methods that promote evolution of solutions to specified problems • Use a model of living organisms adapting to their environment
14.4 OTHER INTELLIGENT TECHNIQUES Hybrid AI Systems • Integration of multiple AI technologies into a single application • Takes advantage of best features of technologies
14.4 OTHER INTELLIGENT TECHNIQUES Intelligent Agents • Software programs • Use built-in or learned knowledge base to carry out specific, repetitive, and predictable tasks