Artigo Revisado por pares

Sense‐making theory and practice: an overview of user interests in knowledge seeking and use

1998; Emerald Publishing Limited; Volume: 2; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1108/13673279810249369

ISSN

1758-7484

Autores

Brenda Dervin,

Tópico(s)

Semantic Web and Ontologies

Resumo

The Sense‐making approach to studying and understanding users and designing systems to serve their needs is reviewed. The approach, developed to focus on user sense making and sense unmaking in the fields of communication and library and information science, is reviewed in terms of its implications for knowledge management. Primary emphasis is placed on moving conceptualizations of users, information and reality from the noun‐based knowledge‐as‐map frameworks of the past to verb‐based frameworks emphasizing diversity, complexity and sense‐making potentials. Knowledge management is described as a field on the precipice of chaos, reaching for a means of emphasizing diversity, complexity and people over centrality, simplicity and technology. Sense making, as an approach, is described as a methodology disciplining the cacophony of diversity and complexity without homogenizing it. Knowledge is reconceptualized from noun to verb.

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