Personal Knowledge Management

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Transcript Personal Knowledge Management

Personal Knowledge
Management
Angela Kille
INF 385Q Knowledge Management Systems
School of Information | University of Texas at Austin
October 20, 2005
Personal Knowledge Management
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Grown out of fields of Personal
Information Management and
Knowledge Management
Focus on individuals
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Help them be more effective in their
work
As We May Think (1945)
by Vannevar Bush
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Make humankind’s store of
knowledge more accessible
Memex – mechanized private file
and library
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Books, pictures, periodicals, etc.
Notes and comments
Associative indexing
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Link items and annotate
As We May Think (1945)
by Vannevar Bush
“[Man] has built a civilization so complex
that he needs to mechanize his records
more fully if he is to push his experiment to
its logical conclusion and not merely
become bogged down part way there by
overtaxing his limited memory. His
excursions may be more enjoyable if he can
reacquire the privilege of forgetting the
manifold things he does not need to have
immediately at hand, with some assurance
that he can find them again if they prove
important.”
MyLifeBits: Fulfilling the Memex Vision
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System for storing personal digital
media: documents, images, sounds,
and videos
Four principles of MyLifeBits
Unique features:
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Interactive Story By Query
Time interval property
MyLifeBits – Screenshot
Stuff I’ve Seen: A System for Personal
Information Retrieval and Re-Use
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Stuff I’ve Seen (SIS) system
designed to facilitate information
re-use
Memex again
Similar to MyLifeBits, but focuses on
a wider range of information
sources and file types
Stuff I’ve Seen – Screenshot
A Personal Information & Knowledge
Infrastructure Integrator (PIKII)
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Vision for the future: PIKII
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Managing and sharing information with
technology evolved from today’s blog
software
Communities of interest
Changes needed for this vision to
happen
How Knowledge Workers Use the Web
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Study of Web activities of
knowledge workers
Aim to understand what new kinds
of technological offerings users
would value
Six categories of Web activities
Results lead to educated guesses
about valued technology
Integrating Back, History and
Bookmarks in Web Browsers
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Back, History and Bookmarks –
facilitate returning to previously
seen pages
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Operate on different underlying models
Created alternative Web site
revisitation system that integrates
these three functions
Discussion
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Any questions?
References
Bush, V. (1945). As we may think. The Atlantic Monthly, 176(1), 101-108. Retrieved
October 18, 2005, from http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/194507/bush
Dumais, S., Cutrell, E., Cadiz, J. J., Jancke, G., Sarin, R., & Robbins, D. C. (2003). Stuff I’ve
seen: A system for personal information retrieval and re-use. Proceedings of the 26th
Annual International ACM SIGIR Conference on Research and Development in
Information Retrieval, 72-79. Retrieved October 18, 2005, from ACM Digital Library
database.
Edmonds, K. A., Blustein, J., & Turnbull, D. (2004). A personal information and knowledge
infrastructure integrator. Journal of Digital Information, 5(1), article no. 243.
Retrieved October 18, 2005, from http://jodi.tamu.edu/Articles/v05/i01/Edmonds/
Gemmell, J., Bell, G., Lueder, R., Drucker, S., & Wong, C. (2002). MyLifeBits: Fulfilling the
Memex vision. Proceedings of the Tenth ACM International Conference on Multimedia,
235-238. Retrieved October 18, 2005, from ACM Digital Library database.
Kaasten, S., & Greenberg, S. (2001). Integrating back, history and bookmarks in Web
browsers. CHI 2001 Conference Proceedings, 379-380.
Sellen, A. J., Murphy, R., & Shaw, K. L. (2002). How knowledge workers use the Web. CHI
2002 Conference Proceedings, 227-234.