1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910144209803321

Titolo

Agent-Mediated Knowledge Management : International Symposium AMKM 2003, Stanford, CA, USA, March 24-26, 2003, Revised and Invited Papers / / edited by Ludger van Elst, Virginia Dignum, Andreas Abecker

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Berlin, Heidelberg : , : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2004

ISBN

1-280-30674-2

9786610306749

3-540-24612-6

Edizione

[1st ed. 2004.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (XI, 428 p.)

Collana

Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence ; ; 2926

Disciplina

006.33

Soggetti

Artificial intelligence

Information storage and retrieval

Application software

User interfaces (Computer systems)

Information technology

Business—Data processing

Artificial Intelligence

Information Storage and Retrieval

Information Systems Applications (incl. Internet)

User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction

IT in Business

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.

Nota di contenuto

Towards Agent-Mediated Knowledge Management -- Towards Agent-Mediated Knowledge Management -- Section I: Collaboration and Peer-to-Peer Support -- Peer-Mediated Distributed Knowledge Management -- The Impact of Conversational Navigational Guides on the Learning, Use, and Perceptions of Users of a Web Site -- Agent-Oriented Knowledge Management in Learning Environments: A Peer-to-Peer



Helpdesk Case Study -- Towards Evaluation of Peer-to-Peer-Based Distributed Knowledge Management Systems -- Section II: Agent Based Community Support -- TAKEUP: Trust-Based Agent-Mediated Knowledge Exchange for Ubiquitous Peer Networks -- Knowledge Management Framework for Collaborative Learning Support -- An Agent-Based Approach to Mailing List Knowledge Management -- Section III: Agent Models for Knowledge and Organizations -- Information Fields in Organization Modeling Using an EDA Multi-agent Architecture -- A Quantum Perturbation Model (QPM) of Knowledge Fusion and Organizational Mergers -- Improving Organizational Memory through Agents for Knowledge Discovery in Database -- Experience in Using RDF in Agent-Mediated Knowledge Architectures -- Using an Agent-Based Framework and Separation of Concerns for the Generation of Document Classification Tools -- Section IV: Context and Personalization -- Modeling Context-Aware Distributed Knowledge -- Discovering, Visualizing, and Sharing Knowledge through Personalized Learning Knowledge Maps -- Agentized, Contextualized Filters for Information Management -- Implicit Culture-Based Personal Agents for Knowledge Management -- Section V: Ontologies and Semantic Web -- Integrating External Sources in a Corporate Semantic Web Managed by a Multi-agent System -- Automatically Generated DAML Markup for Semistructured Documents -- A Spreading Activation Framework for Ontology-Enhanced Adaptive Information Access within Organisations -- Ontology Extraction for Educational Knowledge Bases -- Representing Interaction Protocols in DAML -- Adding AI to Web Services -- Section VI: Agents and Knowledge Engineering -- Knowledge Discovery in Databases and Agent-Mediated Knowledge Management -- Intentional Analysis for Distributed Knowledge Management -- Perspectives: An Analysis of Multiple Viewpoints in Agent-Based Systems -- A Multi-agent Architecture for Evolving Memories -- Agent-Mediated Knowledge Engineering Collaboration -- Dynamic Generation of Agent Communities from Distributed Production and Content-Driven Delivery of Knowledge.

Sommario/riassunto

In this book, we present a collection of papers around the topic of Agent- Mediated Knowledge Management. Most of the papers are extended and - provedversions of work presented at the symposium on Agent-Mediated Kno- edge Management held during the AAAI Spring Symposia Series in March 2003 at Stanford University. The aim of the Agent-Mediated Knowledge Management symposium was to bring together researchers and practitioners of the ?elds of KM and agent te- nologiestodiscussthebene?ts,possibilitiesandadded-valueofcross-fertilization. Knowledge Management (KM) has been a predominant trend in bu- ness in recent years. Not only is Knowledge Management an important ?eld of applicationfor AIandrelatedtechniques,suchasCBRtechnologyforintelligent lessons-learned systems, it also provides new challenges to the AI community, like, for example, context-aware knowledge delivery. Scaling up research pro- typestoreal-worldsolutionsusuallyrequiresanapplication-drivenintegrationof several basic technologies, e.g., ontologies for knowledge sharing and reuse, c- laboration support like CSCW systems, and personalized information services. Typical characteristics to be dealt with in such an integration are: – manifold, logically and physically dispersed actors and knowledge sources, – di?erent degrees of formalization of knowledge, – di?erent kinds of (Web-based) services and (legacy) systems, – con?icts between local (individual) and global (group or organizational) goals.