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KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT UNIT II KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT AND TECHNOLOGY 1 Learning Objectives 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Knowledge management systems: meaning Purpose of knowledge management systems Principles of knowledge management systems Knowledge management system components Artificial intelligence, human intelligence Vs. artificial intelligence 6. Artificial intelligence and conventional computing 2 Knowledge management systems: meaning • Knowledge management systems refer to any kind of IT system that stores and retrieves knowledge, improves collaboration, locates knowledge sources, mines repositories for hidden knowledge, captures and uses knowledge, or in some other way enhances the KM process. 3 Purpose of knowledge management systems • Knowledge management systems provide the technical support to enable knowledge capture and exchange to occur freely, readily and openly across the many different stakeholders in organizations. • KMS provides each user with a channel to acquire, document, transfer, create and apply knowledge to meet the organization’s knowledge priorities. 4 Principles of knowledge management systems 1. Systems have a defined purpose and boundary 2. Systems are normally controllable 3. Systems incorporate a number of interrelated components. 4. Various stakeholders have important roles in supporting the KMS. 5 Systems have a defined purpose and boundary • The purpose is to facilitate knowledge capture and distribution in an organizational environment. 6 Systems are normally controllable • KMS determine what comes in and what goes out. 7 Systems incorporate a number of interrelated components. • KMS subsystems enable communication, knowledge capture, storage and transfer of knowledge objects. 8 Various stakeholders have important roles in supporting the KMS. • The end-user contributes, acquires or consumes knowledge through use of the system. Any system must be both accessible to and compatible with end-users. 9 Knowledge management system components 1. 2. 3. 4. Business process management Content management Web content management Knowledge applications management 10 Business process management • Business process management describes the processes that are required to support the business practices of the organization. • Various systems operate in the firm, like the systems related to finance, HR and decision making, to ensure the effective integration of business. 11 Content management • Content management relates to the intellectual content of the knowledge management system. This ensures users that they can efficiently retrieve knowledge on a particular topic. It provides a range of strategies for indexing, organizing and storing the resources that are linked to the KMS. 12 Web content management • Web content management focuses on building an effective website framework through which users may access the KMS. 13 Knowledge applications management • Knowledge applications management ensures that the users are provided with the application packages and specialist tools for creating and using their knowledge. 14 Artificial Intelligence What is Intelligence? Intelligence is the ability to learn about, to learn from, to understand about, and interact with one’s environment. Artificial Intelligence (AI) is defined as the science of making computers to do things that require intelligence when done by humans. Artificial Intelligence is the study of ideas that enable computers to be intelligent 15 Human Intelligence VS Artificial Intelligence Pros Human Intelligence • Intuition, Common sense, Judgment, Creativity, Beliefs etc • The ability to demonstrate their intelligence by communicating effectively • Plausible Reasoning and Critical thinking Artificial Intelligence • Ability to simulate human behavior and cognitive processes • Capture and preserve human expertise • Fast Response. The ability to comprehend large amounts of data quickly. 16 Human Intelligence VS Artificial Intelligence Cons Human Intelligence Artificial Intelligence • Humans are fallible • They have limited knowledge bases • Information processing of serial nature proceed very slowly in the brain as compared to computers • Humans are unable to retain large amounts of data in memory. • No “common sense” • Cannot readily deal with “mixed” knowledge • May have high development costs • Raise legal and ethical concerns 17 Artificial Intelligence VS Conventional Computing Artificial Intelligence • AI software uses the techniques of search and pattern matching • Programmers design AI software to give the computer only the problem, not the steps necessary to solve it Conventional Computing • Conventional computer software follow a logical series of steps to reach a conclusion • Computer programmers originally designed software that accomplished tasks by completing algorithms 18 KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT UNIT II KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT AND TECHNOLOGY 19