Reframing a Novel Decentralized Knowledge Management Concept as a Desirable Vision: As We May Realize the Memex
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- To reflect—for the benefit of a desirable, plausible, collaborative, and sustainable KMS vision—on Bush’s Memex to furnish a more successful visioneering approach; while not aiming to present a polished self-contained vision statement, the novel core PKMS elements are to be aligned to the guiding visioneering levels.
- To respond to the call by the authors for further validating their original visioneering methods.
- To provide complementing thoughts and content for institutional knowledge vision developers, KM policy makers and practitioners (including the vision’s knowledge asset management and knowledge technology sections [22]).
- To assist developers of digital artefacts engaging in and knowledge workers benefitting from similar visioneering and collaborative KMS design contexts.
2. PKMS’s Role in Integrating and Expanding Current Dynamic KM Models and Practices
3. Vision Engineering for Overcoming an Unsustainable State of KM
3.1. Utopian versus Sustainability Visions
3.2. Sustainable Development and Sustainability Visions in the KM Context
4. Knowledge-Based Visioneering Theory in Support of PKMS Adoption
4.1. Level 1-Reacting: Learning from an Envisioned Future
- The initial idea for a personalized KM system emerged in the 90 s from the need to support personal consulting, scholarly, and managerial activities. The early system catered solely for the author’s own KM needs but has been, over time, continuously adapted and expanded (CE). The author’s professional and academic interactions spanning working environments in developed and developing regions have further underpinned the perceived need for PKMS-like support interventions (RO), a view shared by other writers as referred to in this article.
- However, only the recent technological progress in development, hosting, cloud, and noSQL database platforms initiated the conceptualization (in contrast to the Memex) for advancing the “private” PKMS into a “public” application (AC) serving an envisaged growing PKMS community across their technological devices. In parallel, a series of multi-disciplinary papers and articles have been presented and published in order to report to and receive feedback from peers, readers, attendees, and students (AE) which inspired supplementary foresights and inventiveness (EF) to, in turn, inform subsequent design stages and publications (CE).
- Having experienced the envisioned future, the knowledge output at this first level is a “Vision-1” externalizing the ideas and prospects to overcome constraints and fixations and to meet potential beneficiaries’ needs via affordances. Kaiser refers to the latter as “Satisfiers” (culturally determined concrete solutions to needs or desires) [15]. Any initial vision-1, at this stage, may be incomplete, fragmentary, and-in parts-even illusionary and unsustainable, but it provides a basis for further scrutinizing the needs and their interdependencies to set feasible priorities and/or identify alternative solutions. Vision-1-type PKMS examples are the identification of barriers preventing PKMS-type innovations so far, of wastes in knowledge life cycles, and of vital provisions such systems ought to afford to a user community [46,49,50].
4.2. Level 2-Restructuring: Crystallizing the Essence for the Substantial Needs
- A case in point is an information and communication technologies for development (ICT4D) approach by Johri and Pal. They observed that developmental efforts in low-resource environments disproportionately cater for basic user needs “without adequate attention to user-motivated concerns which would enrich their lives”. They propose prioritizing four design characteristics aiming to make a “real difference in the lives of its intended beneficiaries-those that are significantly disadvantaged in terms of resources as well as opportunities”: (1) access to artefacts (accessibility easiness), (2) ability for self-expression (expressive creativity), (3) ability to interact and form relationships with other people (relational interactivity), and (4) opportunity to enrich the environment (ecological reciprocity) [51].
- From a PKMS perspective, these criteria are too narrowly framed. A “PKM for Development” framework (PKM4D), hence, expanded the four criteria above to twelve progressing sub-needs which also correlate closely to Maslow’s extended “Hierarchy of Needs” [52]. The satisfaction of these sub-needs impacts on individuals as “exciters & delighters” whereas their neglect causes detrimental effects in form of “inhibitors & demotivators”. As these sub-needs correspond to the PKMS digital ecosystems alluded to (see also later in Figure 6, column 6) and their distinctive characteristics and affordances, growing PKMS communities may successfully narrow opportunity divides at societal level which can be targeted by six intervention clusters (scaping, sight setting, socializing, striving, systemizing, and scaling) [53].
4.3. Level 3-Redesigning: Transforming, Validating, and Applying Needs to Vision
- The affordances envisaged to be bestowed on the PKMS user community have been related to network communities’ needs (in support of communication and collaboration [54] and social knowledge sharing [55]). The results confirm the fragility and unsustainability of today’s state, but also that the narratives covered in these two publications only partially cover the transformative needs expressed in the PKM4D framework. The affordances and fixations, thus, needed to be expanded and reprioritized as well as to be restructured to fit the PKMS ecosystems and developmental clusters as well as the generativity and (neg)entropic aspects alluded to [36,42,46].
- From the grass-roots perspective, the concepts and frameworks allow individuals to judge how their “status is weakened under the current technological options and constraints, and how it can be considerably strengthened” by PKMS-like technologies. From the bird’s-eye view, digital vulnerabilities and threats have been addressed utilizing the SVIDT methodology with its impact and intervention clusters which inform stakeholders to assist tackling opportunity divides [40].
4.4. Level 4-Reframing: Sustainable Social Networks and Digital Services
- Growth is-in some instances (e.g., participation in digital communities, platforms, or infrastructures)-not an optional but essential virtue for survival as well as for a disruptive innovation: “A new person added to a network adds value as a member and also adds some value for each other member in the network, so each new member in a large network is worth more than a new member in a small network”. These so-called network effects feature, also, as GPT-criteria and also define the value of social networks as an increasing popularity of one network or social platform can have a devastating competitive impact on the sustainability of others [56].
- However, instead of offering generative accommodating features to collaborate and create across spaces for qualitative growth, current digital platform providers abuse their market position and maintain their continued growth by enforcing inflexible exit, entry, and data format and export barriers at the expense of their captured audiences’ attention, time, productivity, funds, and status [40]. Discouragingly, developing the currently dominating community-support technologies is “left in the hand of [just a] few big players while the research community is just observing and reporting on their usage in different contexts”, a situation which “is stifling the development of real alternatives and the quest for disruptive innovation” [55].
- As growth and technological advances depend on “appreciative humans in pursuit of superior affordances” [36], they need to be made aware of quantitative and qualitative differences. Accordingly, a multi-level heuristic “Appreciation Model” has been devised as an enabling driver of network effects [13,59] by focusing on (1) aesthetic elegance, (2) schematic resonance, (3) contextual relevance, (4) utility, (5) advancement, and (6) enactment. (7) To retain PKMS community users, benefits need “to significantly outstrip the user’s perceived inconveniences due to time, effort, and self-discipline invested” [60].
4.5. Level 5-Regenerating (Presencing and Emerging Futures)
- Rising stakes of the ever-increasing attention-consuming information abundance include undesirable entropy (e.g., paste-and-copy quotes, duplications, fragmentations, inconsistencies, untraceabilities, corruptions, decay, obsolescence, and fake facts) which is threatening the finite attention individuals’ cognitive capabilities are able to master. With search engines unable to keep this “negative generativity” in check, scarce attention needs to be supported by eliminating entropy “so that far less information needs to be read, written, or stored” [62].
- IT and KM practices, fixated on outdated book-age paradigms, still rely on the “over-simplistic modelling of digital documents as monolithic blocks of linear content, with a lack of structural semantics [by] unnecessarily replicating content via copy and paste operations, instead of digitally embedding and reusing parts of digital documents via structural references” [63]. Prioritized developments (industrial internet, big data) are likely to increase entropy further.
- Bush’s criticized “generations-old” “totally inadequate” diffusion and review methods [1] similarly persist as evidenced by calls for more rapid iterative improvement and reputation-based research systems/metrics [64]. Consequently, “magnitudes of invisible work” (defined as “gap between formal representations, including publications, and unreported ‘back stage’ work”) [65] result in undiscoverable private knowledge and entropic repetitive efforts.
- Unfortunately, also the negentropic stakes of our knowledge bases are far from effective. Although “wicked” problem spaces (like the PKMS) require transdisciplinary holistic approaches, Bush’s criticism of “being bogged down today as specialization extends” [1] has increased with the present disciplinary “silos” and their carved-up “curricular and bureaucratic domains”; Bernstein, hence, urges to “creatively re-imagine the disciplines and the possibilities for combining them” [66,67]. Continuing as usual implies that “Structural Holes” [68] (referring to non-existing but viable beneficial ties) are poised to further multiply and expand in line with the risk of more disconnected islands of undiscoverable public knowledge [69].
4.6. Perceiving the “Memex” over Time as Seen via the Five-Level-Framework
5. From the “Memex” to a PKMS Supporting a Digital Platform Ecosystem
5.1. Visualizing the Meta-Landscape of the PKMS Concept for Visioneering
5.2. The PKMS SICEE Workflows versus Nonaka’s SECI Model and DEE Flows
- Column 1: Nonaka’s clockwise document—and record—centric workflows of the SECI and Ba model.
- Column 2: Popper’s three worlds with their clockwise workflow cycle.
- Column 3: PKMS’s ecosystems and eco-subsystems.
- Column 4: PKMS’s anti-clockwise meme-based (see below) workflows of the SICEE cycle.
- Column 5: C-K-design theory generativity types and DEE flows aligned to SICEE workflows.
- Column 6: PKMS’s twelve PKM4D criteria (left) and their corresponding hierarchy-of-needs levels (right). Their vertical structure does not align horizontally to the ecosystems on the left due to the divergent progression of the PKM4D framework (Section 4.2); the alignment is, instead, indicated by the color-scheme (as used in column 3).
- Seizing (K5–C1): The WHOMER repository and curation services provide comprehensive knowledge accessibility to its PKMS user community (request: Demanding others’ resources for personal utility) to gainfully utilize its resources and generative potential in their personal and local settings (inspire: Stimulating generative creation process).
- Imbedding (C1–C2): As associatively structured content in standardized memetic formats (share: Using resources collectively available), users may easily trace, select, and embed transdisciplinary extelligence for use in their own artefacts (decide: Selecting solution among possible alternatives).
- Collating (C2–C3): They may engage by annotating existing memes (suggest: Providing advice or expertise to open issues) or by authoring their own memeplexes and knowledge assets (create: Developing resource to be used/transformed).
- Encompassing (C3–C4): The re-purposed or re-classified memes and their relations may be voluntarily shared (transfer: Assigning informative resources to others) as well as any self-authored novel contributions (conceptualize: Defining original idea to be shared for early feedback) by uploading them from the personal devices to the centralized cloud-based WHOMER repository.
- Effectuating (C4–K5): As a user like any other member of the PKMS community, the centralized PKMS may engage in any of the eight DEE flows reinterpreted above. As managing agent, its curation services ensure the associative integrity and negentropy of its knowledge base and the accuracy of content and member metrics (recommend: Endorsing or promoting others’ resources/reputation) as well as the utility of other added-value services and affordances (network: Enhancing members’ connections and leverages).
5.3. PKMS as a Disruptive Innovation and General-Purpose Technology
6. Applying Vision Quality Criteria for Crafting a PKMS Vision
6.1. Cross-Fertilization Potential of Innovation and Vision Quality Criteria
6.2. Individual Vision Quality Criteria Applied in the PKMS Context
6.2.1. Normative Vision Quality Focus: Individualization and Personalization
6.2.2. Construct Vision Quality Focus: Nano-Contributions and Memetics
6.2.3. Transformational Vision Quality Focus: Revolution and Evolution
- Focus on technologies: Current digital communication technologies rely on networks of instantly, continuously, and ubiquitously connected agents empowered to collaboratively create and directly share information without the need for market intermediaries [90]. The rising granularity of labor markets (Section 6.2.1) and knowledge objects (Section 6.2.2) is, thus, met by increasingly granular informing and information channels. Further complexities arise from progressing constraints affecting finite human attention capabilities and a range of knowledge-related considerations (e.g., confidentiality, copyrights, commercialization, and dominant market behavior resulting in service barriers, captured audiences, and walled garden approaches) and deficiencies (e.g., incompatibilities, lack of tools, functionalities, and mentoring support).
- Focus on knowledge workers: Although widely disregarded, the Nonaka’s SECI and Ba concepts did recommend nurturing knowledge workers’ individual autonomy, knowledge-related personal proficiencies/assets, and creative interactions [37] as an essential prerequisite to promote and convert their “nano”-contributions into personal capabilities and institutional and/or societal performances.
- Focus on knowledge objects: Since ideas hosted by their memes flourish in the real-world “Ideosphere” (as maintained by Memetics) as represented by the SECI and SICEE workflows (Figure 6), the PKM repository is dwelling in the equivalent “virtual” space by imitating the ideosphere’s memetic riches (content and relations) instead of storing redundant copied texts.
- Focus on knowledge networks: The combination of PKMS devices and the WHOMER repository afford a universal utility benefitting personal and organizational learning and performance by bridging information demand and supply and by fostering absorptive capacities and ambidextrous dynamic capabilities. Ambidexterity implies being capable of exploration as well as exploitation, but also requires efforts “to identify, nurture, and effectively deploy ambidextrous individual researchers [or knowledge workers] and also consider them for participating in innovation teams”, as evidenced by a recent meta-study identifying the strongest association between creativity and innovation at the individual (not team) level [97].
7. Conclusions and the Road Ahead
7.1. From the KM Perspective
7.2. From the Visioneering Perspective
- To better serve the growing creative class of knowledge workers and the innovation agenda of knowledge economies compared to current solutions.
- To get a more effective grip on the ever-increasing information abundance, invisible work, structural holes, changing work spheres, widening digital and innovation divides, self-development, and e-training and e-collaboration needs.
- To transform the abstract Popperian third world over time into an expanding tangible accessible interrogatable comprehensive transdisciplinary knowledge base (WHOMER).
- To re-design basic processes of capturing, distributing, and effectively using knowledge (referring to a widely quoted early KM definition [111]) to make a KM difference.
- To strengthen interventions in the individual, organizational, and societal capacity development contexts of education, professions, and knowledge economies.
7.3. From an Implementation Perspective
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Appendix A.1. Cultural Shift 1 (Normative-Visionary)
Appendix A.2. Process Innovation 1 (Normative-Sustainable)
Appendix A.3. Relational Innovation 1 (Normative-Visionary)
Appendix A.4. Product Innovation 1 (Normative-Sustainable)
Appendix B. Construct Vision Quality Criteria: Nano-Contributions and Memetics
Appendix B.1. Cultural Shift 2 (Constructivist-Coherent)
Appendix B.2. Process Innovation 2 (Constructivist-Tangible)
Appendix B.3. Product Innovation 2 (Constructivist-Systemic)
Appendix B.4. Relational Innovation 2 (Constructivist-Plausible)
Appendix C. Transformational Vision Quality Criteria: Revolution and Evolution
Appendix C.1. Process Innovation 3 (Transformational-Nuanced)
Appendix C.2. Relational Innovation 3 (Transformational-Motivational)
Appendix C.3. Cultural Shift 3 (Transformational-Shared)
Appendix C.4. Product Innovation 3 (Transformational-Relevant)
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Visioneering | As Inspiring Vision Never Realized, Pros and Cons Have Been Attributed to: |
---|---|
Reacting to known solutions | To Bush’s imagining of an innovative system based on “new forms of interwoven documents” and new ways of how “scientists and scholars could handle and share their ideas, writing, reading and filing in a magical system at their desks […] to be consulted with exceeding speed and flexibility” [3], “envisioned to tackle the ‘information overload’ problem, already a formidable one in 1945” [5] |
Restructuring of solutions-in-use | To Bush’s “vision of how information could be manageable [by utilizing] personal associations derived from experience, and not abstract structures” and indexing [7]. However, “the early pioneers of hypertext were [also] all directly influenced by Bush’s vision” [4] and “Bush never foresaw that the technologies he hoped would tame the [information] problem might actually contribute to its intensification” [6]. |
Redesigning for new perspectives | To his Memex which “was an early example of exactly what [our] survey will characterize as a personal knowledge base [which integrated] collaborative aspects as well, and even a world-wide system that scientists could freely consult” [5]. |
Reframing for radical innovation (reason no viable Memex exists yet) | To “the broad spectrum of demands that could be placed on such a system [although] such applications could radically improve the way people deal with computers, information, and their entire world” [5]. “If a Memex was needed in Bush’s day, then today’s information explosion makes it an order of magnitude more important” [8]. |
Regenerating and the current state of coming-into-being | To “future tools [Bush hoped to see] that would reduce information overload and promote information synthesis, tools that would allow humanity truly to encompass the great record and to grow in wisdom” [6]. However, “while today we have many powerful applications for locating vast amounts of digital information, we lack effective tools for selecting, structuring, personalizing, and making sense of the digital resources available to us” [71]. The PKM tools and systems available “are not integrated with each other [and] provide only a partial support to knowledge workers” [72]. |
Criteria GPT | Attributes of General-Purpose Technology [57]: |
General Purpose | To perform enabling generic functions for complementary innovations triggering transformational developments and general productivity gains. |
Prevalence | To persist over time despite challenging alternatives based on coordinating agents’ choices in the context of systems’ systemic technical interrelatedness, quasi-irreversibility of investment via switching barriers, and positive externalities from supply-side learning and/or demand-side network effects. |
Input Characteristics | To widely impact on general applicability and productivity growth, dynamic technical change and improvements, and product and process innovation. |
Dominant Design | Based on usefulness, wide acceptance and usage, or establishment as standard, leading to dominance over alternatives, path-dependency, market allegiance. |
Criteria Disruption | Systemic Roots of Sustaining or Disruptive Innovation [56]: |
Product Innovation | Emphasis on changes in object attributes and distinctions between ideal and actual operating performance as a dominant influence in their evolution. |
Process Innovation | Emphasis on improving manufacturing practices as well as product usage to aim for dominant designs to stimulate product loyalty in the customer base. |
Relational Innovation | Emphasis on developing desire for products/services based on subjective (popular demand based) and objective (generic needs based) social relevance. |
Cultural Shifts | Emphasis on social/historical contexts as basis for individuals and institutions to interpret information for (re-)creating meanings, familiarity, comfort. |
GPT Criteria Descriptor with Reference to Subsections in Appendix A | |
---|---|
* Aim of Affordances | Key Affordances and Argumentation Points
|
A.1 General Purpose 1: Performing Generic Functions for Downstream Generalized Productivity | |
* Narrowing opportunity divides |
|
A.2 General Purpose 3: Transforming Economic System driven by Down-stream Productivity Gains | |
* Easing knowledge access/use/creation |
|
A.3 Prevalence 3b: Positive Demand Side Network Effects based on increasing Adoption Rates | |
* Easing knowledge access/use/creation |
|
A.4 Dominant Design 1: Dominant Design based on Usefulness to achieve wide Acceptance and Usage | |
* Fostering digital platform ecosystem |
|
GPT Criteria Descriptor with Reference to Subsections in Appendix B | |
---|---|
* Aim of Affordances | Key Affordances and Argumentation Points
|
B.1 Dominant Design 2: Leading to Standard winning over Stakeholders’ Allegiance in Market Place | |
* Promoting personal KMS needs |
|
B.2 Input Characteristic 2: Wide Scope of Credible Improvements and Prospects for Enabling Environments | |
* Reducing knowledge entropy |
|
B.3 Prevalence 1: Systemic Approach facilitating Technical Inter-relatedness of Components | |
* Co-evolving with Institutional KMS |
|
B.4 Prevalence 2: Quasi-Irreversibility of Switching Costs related to Alternative Options | |
* Instantiating Popper’s 3rd World |
|
GPT Criteria Descriptor with Reference to Subsections in Appendix C | |
---|---|
* Aim of Affordances | Key Affordances and Main Discussion Points
|
C.1 Input Characteristic 1: Impact on Technical Change and Productivity Growth across Uses and Industries | |
* Digital-age instead book-age paradigm |
|
C.2 Prevalence 3a: Externalities from Supply Side Learning Effects (learning by doing or using) | |
* PKMS educational agenda |
|
C.3 Input Characteristic 3: Spawning Innovations in a broad Range of Uses and/or Application Sectors | |
* Autonomous PKM capacities |
|
C.4 General Purpose 2: Promoting Impact by Complementary Innovations in Downstream Sectors | |
* Generativity and Innovativeness |
|
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Schmitt, U. Reframing a Novel Decentralized Knowledge Management Concept as a Desirable Vision: As We May Realize the Memex. Sustainability 2021, 13, 4038. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13074038
Schmitt U. Reframing a Novel Decentralized Knowledge Management Concept as a Desirable Vision: As We May Realize the Memex. Sustainability. 2021; 13(7):4038. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13074038
Chicago/Turabian StyleSchmitt, Ulrich. 2021. "Reframing a Novel Decentralized Knowledge Management Concept as a Desirable Vision: As We May Realize the Memex" Sustainability 13, no. 7: 4038. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13074038
APA StyleSchmitt, U. (2021). Reframing a Novel Decentralized Knowledge Management Concept as a Desirable Vision: As We May Realize the Memex. Sustainability, 13(7), 4038. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13074038