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Managing knowledge networks / J. David Johnson.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2009.Description: xv, 362 p. : ill. ; 26 cmISBN:
  • 9780521514545 (hardback)
  • 9780521735520 (pbk.)
  • 0521735521 (pbk.)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 006.33   22
Contents:
Introduction and overview -- Forms of knowledge -- Network analysis -- Context -- Designing knowledge networks -- Technology -- Spatial distributions of knowledge -- Bringing in the world outside -- Creativity and innovation -- Productivity : efficiency and effectiveness -- The human side -- Finding knowledge -- Decision making -- Summary and commentary.
Summary: The information context of the modern organization is rapidly evolving in the face of intense global competition. Information technologies, including databases, new telecommunications systems, and software for synthesizing information, make a vast array of information available to an ever expanding number of organizational members. Management’s exclusive control over knowledge is steadily declining, in part because of the downsizing of organizations and the decline of the number of layers in an organizational hierarchy. These trends, as well as issues surrounding the Web 2.0 and social networking, mean that it is increasingly important that we understand how informal knowledge networks impact the generation, capturing, storing, dissemination, and application of knowledge. This innovative book provides a thorough analysis of knowledge networks, focusing on how relationships contribute to the creation of knowledge, its distribution within organizations, how it is diffused and transferred, and how people find it and share it collaboratively"--Provided by publisher.Summary: he information context of the modern organization is rapidly evolving in the face of intense global competition. Information technologies, including databases, new telecommunications systems, and software for synthesizing information, make a vast array of information available to an ever expanding number of organizational members. Management’s exclusive control over knowledge is steadily declining, in part because of the downsizing of organizations and the decline of the number of layers in an organizational hierarchy. These trends, as well as issues surrounding theWeb 2.0 and social networking, mean that it is increasingly important that we understand how informal knowledge networks impact the generation, capturing, storing, dissemination, and application of knowledge. This innovative book provides a thorough analysis of knowledge networks, focusing on how relationships contribute to the creation of knowledge, its distribution within organizations, how it is diffused and transferred, and how people find it and share it collaboratively. j . david johnson has been Dean of the College of Communications and Information Studies at the University of Kentucky since 1998. He has also held academic positions at the University ofWisconsin Milwaukee, Arizona State University, the State University of New York at Buffalo, and Michigan State University, and was a media research analyst for the US Information Agency. He has been recognized as among the one hundred most prolific publishers of refereed journal articles in the history of the communication discipline"--Provided by publisher.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books Main library General Stacks 006.33 / JO.M 2009 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 007005
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006.33 / GI.E 2005 Expert systems : 006.33 / GI.E 2005 Expert systems : 006.33 / JA.I 1999 Introduction to expert systems / 006.33 / JO.M 2009 Managing knowledge networks / 006.33 / NE.A 2005 Artificial intelligence : 006.33 / NE.A 2011 Artificial intelligence : 006.332 / KE.I 2007 An introduction to knowledge engineering /

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction and overview -- Forms of knowledge -- Network analysis -- Context -- Designing knowledge networks -- Technology -- Spatial distributions of knowledge -- Bringing in the world outside -- Creativity and innovation -- Productivity : efficiency and effectiveness -- The human side -- Finding knowledge -- Decision making -- Summary and commentary.

The information context of the modern organization is rapidly evolving in the face of intense global competition. Information technologies, including databases, new telecommunications systems, and software for synthesizing information, make a vast array of information available to an ever expanding number of organizational members. Management’s exclusive control over knowledge is steadily declining, in part because of the downsizing of organizations and the decline of the number of layers in an organizational hierarchy. These trends, as well as issues surrounding the Web 2.0 and social networking, mean that it is increasingly important that we understand how informal knowledge networks impact the generation, capturing, storing, dissemination, and application of knowledge. This innovative book provides a thorough analysis of knowledge networks, focusing on how relationships contribute to the creation of knowledge, its distribution within organizations, how it is diffused and transferred, and how people find it and share it collaboratively"--Provided by publisher.

he information context of the modern organization is rapidly evolving in the face of intense global competition. Information technologies, including databases, new telecommunications systems, and software for synthesizing information, make a vast array of information available to an ever expanding number of organizational members. Management’s exclusive control over knowledge is steadily declining, in part because of the downsizing of organizations and the decline of the number of layers in an organizational hierarchy. These trends, as well as issues surrounding theWeb 2.0 and social networking, mean that it is increasingly important that we understand how informal knowledge networks impact the generation, capturing, storing, dissemination, and application of knowledge. This innovative book provides a thorough analysis of knowledge networks, focusing on how relationships contribute to the creation of knowledge, its distribution within organizations, how it is diffused and transferred, and how people find it and share it collaboratively. j . david johnson has been Dean of the College of Communications and Information Studies at the University of Kentucky since 1998. He has also held academic positions at the University ofWisconsin Milwaukee, Arizona State University, the State University of New York at Buffalo, and Michigan State University, and was a media research analyst for the US Information Agency. He has been recognized as among the one hundred most prolific publishers of refereed journal articles in the history of the communication discipline"--Provided by publisher.

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