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287 Essays on Knowledge Understanding. Documents 26 - 50

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Last update: August 26, 2014
  • A Knowledge Entry System for Subject Matter Experts

    A Knowledge Entry System for Subject Matter Experts

    The High Performance Knowledge Bases (HPKB) project demonstrated that the teams of knowledge engineers working together could create knowledge bases (KBs) roughly at the rate of 10K axioms/year for a pre-specified task and evaluation criteria. The HPKB effort showed that it is possible to create KBs by reusing the content of knowledge libraries, and it demonstrated reuse rates ranging from 25% to 100%, depending on the application and the knowledge engineer. It was acknowledged that

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    Essay Length: 510 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: November 21, 2009 By: Wendy
  • Understanding Burnout Associated with the Workplace

    Understanding Burnout Associated with the Workplace

    Burnout in the workplace doesn’t happen overnight but it’s a slow process. It is a condition that developed over time due to many things at work. Employees can be burnout over time due to unfavorable work conditions, dealing with deadlines, and uncooperative workers. The burnout doesn’t stay in the workplace only. Employees experiencing burnout at work will have a big impact on their efficiency at work. Their job’s performance will drop, relationship with other employees

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    Essay Length: 273 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: November 21, 2009 By: Mikki
  • Implicit Knowledge

    Implicit Knowledge

    Because of the close relationship between technology transfer and economic growth, making tacit knowledge elicit and transferable has been a subject of significance to many groups. As a result, organizations are focusing their knowledge management in building up elicit or digital shape of knowledge. This paper addresses the difficulty in codifying the tacit knowledge which represents the more important aspect in the intellectual capital of any company. First of all, we will describe what tacit

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    Essay Length: 506 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: November 21, 2009 By: Jessica
  • Explain How the Settings in Maestro Contribute to Our Understanding of the Characters

    Explain How the Settings in Maestro Contribute to Our Understanding of the Characters

    Explain how the settings in Maestro contribute to our understanding of the characters. The settings in Maestro are significant to the understanding of the characters, as well as reflective of the attitudes and growth of the characters in each location. Darwin is portrayed as a town of escapees and exiles. The mixed bag of races and ages, collaborate into a lifestyle of booze and somewhat lower class living. Paul’s time in Darwin reflects his growing

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    Essay Length: 419 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: November 21, 2009 By: Mike
  • Conflict Resolution: Understand to Achieve

    Conflict Resolution: Understand to Achieve

    Conflict Resolution: Understand to Achieve Whenever people unite to work as a team for anything more than a brief duration, some conflict is normal, and should be expected (Engleberg, Wynn & Schutter, 2003). Because of the inevitability of conflict, being able to recognize, address, and ultimately resolve it is vitally important, since unresolved conflict may have undesirable effects, including reduced morale, or increased turnover (De Janasz, Dowd & Schneider, 2001). Just as conflicts within team

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    Essay Length: 1,928 Words / 8 Pages
    Submitted: November 23, 2009 By: Tommy
  • Understanding What Motivates Workers Is a Key Task for Management

    Understanding What Motivates Workers Is a Key Task for Management

    Principles of Management Assignment: Report Title: “Understanding what motivates workers is a key task for management” Index Introduction………………………………………. 2 Motivations and Assumptions about People……… 4 Behavioral Sciences……………………………… 7 Major Motivation Theories………………………… 9 Motivation in Practice……………….……… 15 Other Strategies……….……………………… 16 Conclusion …………….…………………….. 17 Learning Outcomes…………………………… 17 Acknowledgements…………………………… 17 References……………………………………. 18 Introduction If we stand back and recall to ourselves the true and simplistic meaning of the word motivation, “The set of forces that cause people to

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    Essay Length: 2,180 Words / 9 Pages
    Submitted: November 24, 2009 By: Stenly
  • How Might In-Depth Knowledge of Motivational Theory Help Someone Become a Better Manager?

    How Might In-Depth Knowledge of Motivational Theory Help Someone Become a Better Manager?

    HOW MIGHT IN-DEPTH KNOWLEDGE OF MOTIVATIONAL THEORY HELP SOMEONE BECOME A BETTER MANAGER? The word motivation comes from the Latin word "movere", which means to move. Motivation is defined as an internal drive that activates behaviours and gives it direction. The term motivation theory is concerned with the processes that describe why and how human behaviour is activated and directed. It is regarded as one of the most important areas of study in the field

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    Essay Length: 1,762 Words / 8 Pages
    Submitted: November 24, 2009 By: Artur
  • Understanding How Fallacies, Critical Thinking and Decision Making Techniques Are All Linked Togethe

    Understanding How Fallacies, Critical Thinking and Decision Making Techniques Are All Linked Togethe

    How it all comes together 1 Understanding how fallacies, critical thinking and decision making techniques are all linked together. What is a logical fallacy? According to the Webster dictionary (1996), a fallacy is a false notion. A statement or argument based on a false or invalid inference. Fallacies can be divided into two different groups; the first one is the fallacy of relevance where the premises are irrelevant to the outcome. The other is fallacy

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    Essay Length: 1,622 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: November 24, 2009 By: Mikki
  • How Can the Knowledge of the Gestalt Laws of Gestalt Pshychology Help a Visual Communication Designer to Produce More Effective Designs?

    How Can the Knowledge of the Gestalt Laws of Gestalt Pshychology Help a Visual Communication Designer to Produce More Effective Designs?

    How important is it to take into consideration the gestalt laws when you communicate visually. Is it possible that a good knowledge of them can help a designer to be more effective. And in that case, in what way. The Gestalt Laws was first written by Max Wertheimer in 1923 and is common laws that shows that different shapes creates wholes and was needed for the Gestalt Psychology to work practically. These laws were created

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    Essay Length: 411 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: November 24, 2009 By: Top
  • Knowledge Management

    Knowledge Management

    Knowledge Management “Knowledge management is the set of practices aimed at discovering and harnessing an organization’s intellectual resources. It’s about finding, unlocking, sharing, and altogether capitalizing on the most precious resources of an organization: people’s expertise, skills, wisdom, and relationships. Knowledge managers find these human assets, help people collaborate and learn, help people generate new ideas, and harness those ideas into successful innovations” (Bateman, 2004, p.8-9). One of the most important factors of change

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    Essay Length: 2,714 Words / 11 Pages
    Submitted: November 26, 2009 By: Andrew
  • Understanding the Fantasized Past

    Understanding the Fantasized Past

    Understanding the Fantasized Past There comes a time where the man becomes a monster, and the monster becomes a man. Where the civilized turn barbarisitc, and the barbaristic turn civilized. From then on out we enter in an existent world filled with morbid creatures, medieval weaponry, and confusing languages. Larping is the name of the game, which means Live Action Role Playing. A live game where the individual player plays a role in a

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    Essay Length: 1,119 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: November 26, 2009 By: Monika
  • Understanding Mumbai Railways

    Understanding Mumbai Railways

    Transportation becomes an area of utmost importance when a place is being judged on its standard of living. Ever since the invention of the wheel, the human race has been obsessed with developing faster, cheaper and safer modes of transport. Hence what subject could we have found for an analysis better than one of the biggest transport bodies in the world. A structure that accommodates 6.3 billion people every day. Spread across 319 kilometers, the

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    Essay Length: 595 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: November 26, 2009 By: Monika
  • Innate Knowledge Locke

    Innate Knowledge Locke

    The thought that humans are born with some sort of innate ideas has been a much debated topic for many years. It is impossible to say if it is true or not, but it is believed true by many people, including some religions. John Locke has several arguments against innate knowledge; among these, the argument that states that if we did in fact possess innate ideas, then everybody would agree on at least one idea.

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    Essay Length: 866 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: November 26, 2009 By: David
  • The Theries We Use to Help Us Understand Standard Setting in National Arenas Don’t Work So Well at the International Level Where the International Accounting Starndards Board Is Taking a Lead Role.We Will Have to Modify Them or Expand Our Theoretical Re

    The Theries We Use to Help Us Understand Standard Setting in National Arenas Don’t Work So Well at the International Level Where the International Accounting Starndards Board Is Taking a Lead Role.We Will Have to Modify Them or Expand Our Theoretical Re

    Abstract This paper is devoted to investigate the recent development of Australian accounting standards-setting in the light of theories of economics and sociology particularly in respect of the events and controversies around convergence of international accounting standards. The purpose of this paper is to examine the strength and weakness of different theories in the analysis of standard-setting process and more importantly, seek to compare standard setting process and major players involved in national and international

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    Essay Length: 3,046 Words / 13 Pages
    Submitted: November 27, 2009 By: Yan
  • Knowledge M

    Knowledge M

    Introduction In today’s economy, corporations are constantly seeking was to achieve faster decision making, higher levels of product, better service, and process innovation to gain competitive advantage over other corporations. Various information technologies have been adapted in to corporation’s business plans in order to optimize competitive advantage. However, with the increase in competition, information technology’s applications in business no longer serve as a great advantage. The need for new business strategies arises along with the

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    Essay Length: 3,263 Words / 14 Pages
    Submitted: November 27, 2009 By: Vika
  • Skitsophrenia: People Don’t Understand

    Skitsophrenia: People Don’t Understand

    Skitsophrenia: People Don't Understand How would you feel if everything seemed so real to you but the thing is only to you? No one else could see or hear what you are hearing or seeing. How frustrating will that be to try to tell people what you were experiencing and having them tell you they don't understand or believe anything you are saying. In the movie called "The Beautiful Mind," A man by the name

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    Essay Length: 388 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: November 27, 2009 By: Jon
  • Population, Food, and Knowledge

    Population, Food, and Knowledge

    Johnson, D.G. “Population, Food, and Knowledge.” American Economic Review 90 (2000): 1-14. When judging the current state of the world, one can examine many different aspects. Some such aspects include people, agriculture, and advancement of knowledge. These areas can help one better understand where the world has been, where it is currently at, and where it will be in the future. This kind of study is necessary so as to ensure that the future of

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    Essay Length: 774 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: November 27, 2009 By: Fonta
  • Understanding the Vampire Myth in Slavic Cultures

    Understanding the Vampire Myth in Slavic Cultures

    In seeking to understand the vampire myth in Slavic cultures I found myself intrigued by the essay, Forensic Pathology and the European Vampire, exclusive to Alan Dundes's, The Vampire: A Casebook. Within this essay, an enticing and new interpretation of the vampire is offered by historian, Paul Barber. Uniquely, Barber approaches the vampire myth with the notion that " most if not all of the beliefs surrounding the vampire can be explained in terms of

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    Essay Length: 739 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: November 28, 2009 By: Edward
  • Can People Still Rely on Knowledge from Experts?

    Can People Still Rely on Knowledge from Experts?

    “There is no evidence that scientists always tell the truth, and the chances are that they are only marginally more honest than, say, politicians” (New Scientist) Knowledge can be defined as an organised body of information which through experience, theories and studies help the human mind discover and develop new information. Different forms of knowledge include medical, religious, scientific, and common-sense and these in turn have their own language and status and there is privileging

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    Essay Length: 1,368 Words / 6 Pages
    Submitted: November 29, 2009 By: Tommy
  • Understanding Germ Theory with Kuhn

    Understanding Germ Theory with Kuhn

    Germ Theory The germ theory began in the late 1880s and began as the understanding that organisms beyond the view of man could exist. Bacteria were the first found microscopic items, and took a decade to prove. Job Lewis Smith, a pediatric doctor in the late nineteenth century began studying outbreaks of cholera. No other doctors were able to explain why the children were getting ill. He worked in the slums of New York and

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    Essay Length: 1,341 Words / 6 Pages
    Submitted: November 29, 2009 By: Steve
  • Plato and Innate Knowledge

    Plato and Innate Knowledge

    Universal knowledge possessed by human beings is not acquired, but is “innate”. The senses effectuate a recollection of wisdom gained during the soul’s existence prior to birth. I believe these statements to be true and as a proponent, shall argue in favor on the basis of Plato’s works regarding the same. Plato asserts that universal knowledge is not acquired, but rather, is inherently present in humans from birth. This “knowledge of the forms” was gained

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    Essay Length: 519 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: November 30, 2009 By: Monika
  • Identifying and Understanding Trends in the Marketing Environment

    Identifying and Understanding Trends in the Marketing Environment

    Identifying and Understanding Trends in the Marketing Environment Consumer behavior is influenced by both internal and external factors. Internal factors, also called the personal factors, are things like motivation, learning, and perception. External, or social, factors include things like social norms, family roles, and cultural values. Trends in the external environment can have major impact on consumer choices and preferences. It is important for marketing managers to be aware of such trends. How can managers

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    Essay Length: 941 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: November 30, 2009 By: Anna
  • The Contribution of Sociology to Our Understanding of Environmental Problem

    The Contribution of Sociology to Our Understanding of Environmental Problem

    Environmental problems have been growing alongside with human’s development for centuries, and the impact of human on the environment is getting greater by the matter of new inventions and technologies that keeps evolving to replace labor. When it gets to the point that we [human] realize that we cause those problems and are the one who is suffering from the consequences, we also realize that environmental problems is our problems. Because it is undeniable that

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    Essay Length: 278 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: November 30, 2009 By: Monika
  • Understanding Hiroshima

    Understanding Hiroshima

    Understanding Hiroshima Over 200,000 people, dying in one small period of time is quite a large number considering it would grow for many years to come. The number this is referring to is the amount of people died during the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the radiation effects from them. Not everyone completely understood what happened that early August 6th morning in 1945 when the United States attempted to force Japan to surrender

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    Essay Length: 681 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: December 2, 2009 By: Tasha
  • Setting and It’s Effect on Understanding Young Goodman Brown

    Setting and It’s Effect on Understanding Young Goodman Brown

    Matt Fondriest Fiction Paper 2-10-05 Setting and its Effect on Understanding Young Goodman Brown Every tale ever told shares similar formal elements. All of these formal elements have equally important consequence on a story. The setting of a story has direct correlations to the way that the reader consumes the meaning of the story. The setting in Young Goodman Brown allows its author, Nathaniel Hawthorne, to leave the ending ambiguous, without closure. The reader is

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    Essay Length: 825 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: December 2, 2009 By: Max

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