About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 68. Chapters: DIKW, Collective intelligence, Human Terrain System, Battle Command Knowledge System, Knowledge-based engineering, Personal knowledge management, Narrative inquiry, Knowledge work productivity, Organizational memory, Strategic Profiling, Corporate amnesia, Knowledge market, The UK Government's Knowledge Network Programme, Knowledge organization, Jumper 2.0, Tephritid Workers Database, Dave Snowden, Oral debriefing, Knowledge spillover, Process Development Execution System, Integration Objects, Legal case management, Knowledge tags, Anthony Judge, Fabasoft Mindbreeze, Knowledge policy, RIBA Knowledge Communities, Association of Management Consulting Firms, Corporate history, Ripple-down rules, Invention Machine, KM concepts, Duality, Centre for Innovation and Structural Change, Knowledge Plaza, Know-net consortium, Knowledge value, Inquira, Colayer, Flow, National Centre for Science Information, Knowledge management software, Project blog, Knowledge Cafe, Legal matter management, KnowledgeBase Manager Pro, UN Peacemaker, Teragram Corporation, Tag management, Term-based architecture, CSHALS, Records management taxonomy, Question Manager. Excerpt: The "DIKW Hierarchy," also known variously as the "Wisdom Hierarchy," the "Knowledge Hierarchy," the "Information Hierarchy," and the "Knowledge Pyramid," refers loosely to a class of models for representing purported structural and/or functional relationships between data, information, knowledge, and wisdom. "Typically information is defined in terms of data, knowledge in terms of information, and wisdom in terms of knowledge." Not all versions of the DIKW model reference all four components (earlier versions not including data, later versions omitting or downplaying wisdom), and some include additional components. In addition to a hierarchy and a pyramid, the DIKW model has...