Knowledge Artifact (KA) is an analytical construct by which analysts, researchers and designers from different disciplines usually denote those material objects that in organizations regard the creation, use, sharing and representation of knowledge. This paper aims to fill a gap in the existing literature by providing a conceptual framework for the interpretation of the heterogeneous contributions on this concept in the specialist literature. From our survey of the main contributions to the definition of this concept, we outline a spectrum of stances laying between two theoretical extremes: we denote one pole "representational", as it is grounded on the idea that knowledge can be an "object per se"; and the other pole "socially situated", as it builds on the viewpoint seeing knowledge as a social practice, that is an epiphenomenon of a situated, context-dependent and performative interaction of human actors through and with "objects of knowing". In proposing a unifying model to gather complementary dimensions of knowledge together, our aim is to shed light on the multiple ways these ideas can inform the "reification" of knowledge into particular IT artifacts, which we call IT Knowledge Artifact (ITKA), and on how seemingly irreconcilable positions can contribute in the design of these computational artifact supporting knowledge work in organizations.

Cabitza, F., Locoro, A. (2014). "Made with knowledge": Disentangling the IT Knowledge Artifact by a qualitative literature review. In KMIS 2014: Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Knowledge Management and Information Sharing. Rome, Italy, 21-24 October 2014. (pp.64-75). INSTICC Press [10.5220/0005086100640075].

"Made with knowledge": Disentangling the IT Knowledge Artifact by a qualitative literature review

CABITZA, FEDERICO ANTONIO NICCOLO' AMEDEO;LOCORO, ANGELA
2014

Abstract

Knowledge Artifact (KA) is an analytical construct by which analysts, researchers and designers from different disciplines usually denote those material objects that in organizations regard the creation, use, sharing and representation of knowledge. This paper aims to fill a gap in the existing literature by providing a conceptual framework for the interpretation of the heterogeneous contributions on this concept in the specialist literature. From our survey of the main contributions to the definition of this concept, we outline a spectrum of stances laying between two theoretical extremes: we denote one pole "representational", as it is grounded on the idea that knowledge can be an "object per se"; and the other pole "socially situated", as it builds on the viewpoint seeing knowledge as a social practice, that is an epiphenomenon of a situated, context-dependent and performative interaction of human actors through and with "objects of knowing". In proposing a unifying model to gather complementary dimensions of knowledge together, our aim is to shed light on the multiple ways these ideas can inform the "reification" of knowledge into particular IT artifacts, which we call IT Knowledge Artifact (ITKA), and on how seemingly irreconcilable positions can contribute in the design of these computational artifact supporting knowledge work in organizations.
paper
IT Artifact; Knowledge Artifact; Literature review; Organizational knowledge;
IT Artifact; Knowledge Artifact; Literature review; Organizational knowledge
English
6th International Conference on Knowledge Management and Information Sharing, KMIS 2014
2014
KMIS 2014: Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Knowledge Management and Information Sharing. Rome, Italy, 21-24 October 2014.
9789897580505
2014
2014
64
75
reserved
Cabitza, F., Locoro, A. (2014). "Made with knowledge": Disentangling the IT Knowledge Artifact by a qualitative literature review. In KMIS 2014: Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Knowledge Management and Information Sharing. Rome, Italy, 21-24 October 2014. (pp.64-75). INSTICC Press [10.5220/0005086100640075].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/136484
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