Recent knowledge management initiatives focus on expertise sharing within formal organizational units and informal communities of practice. Expert recommender systems seem to be a promising tool in support of these initiatives. This paper presents experiences in designing an expert recommender system for a knowledge-intensive organization, namely the National Industry Association (NIA). Field study results provide a set of specific design requirements. Based on these requirements, we have designed an expert recommender system which is integrated into the specific software infrastructure of the organizational setting. The organizational setting is, as we will show, specific for historical, political, and economic reasons. These particularities influence the employeesʼ organizational and (inter-)personal needs within this setting. The paper connects empirical findings of a long-term case study with design experiences of an expertise recommender system.
%0 Journal Article
%1 Reichling_et_al_2007
%A Reichling, Tim
%A Veith, Michael
%A Wulf, Volker
%D 2007
%E Carroll, John MEditor
%I Springer
%J Computer Supported Cooperative Work
%K expert_finder recommender
%N 4-5
%P 431--465
%T Expert Recommender: Designing for a Network Organization
%U http://www.springerlink.com/index/10.1007/s10606-007-9055-2
%V 16
%X Recent knowledge management initiatives focus on expertise sharing within formal organizational units and informal communities of practice. Expert recommender systems seem to be a promising tool in support of these initiatives. This paper presents experiences in designing an expert recommender system for a knowledge-intensive organization, namely the National Industry Association (NIA). Field study results provide a set of specific design requirements. Based on these requirements, we have designed an expert recommender system which is integrated into the specific software infrastructure of the organizational setting. The organizational setting is, as we will show, specific for historical, political, and economic reasons. These particularities influence the employeesʼ organizational and (inter-)personal needs within this setting. The paper connects empirical findings of a long-term case study with design experiences of an expertise recommender system.
@article{Reichling_et_al_2007,
abstract = {Recent knowledge management initiatives focus on expertise sharing within formal organizational units and informal communities of practice. Expert recommender systems seem to be a promising tool in support of these initiatives. This paper presents experiences in designing an expert recommender system for a knowledge-intensive organization, namely the National Industry Association (NIA). Field study results provide a set of specific design requirements. Based on these requirements, we have designed an expert recommender system which is integrated into the specific software infrastructure of the organizational setting. The organizational setting is, as we will show, specific for historical, political, and economic reasons. These particularities influence the employeesʼ organizational and (inter-)personal needs within this setting. The paper connects empirical findings of a long-term case study with design experiences of an expertise recommender system.},
added-at = {2011-06-18T10:51:08.000+0200},
author = {Reichling, Tim and Veith, Michael and Wulf, Volker},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2df4b250cfed15a430f85471eec3b7fcb/bluedolphin},
editor = {Carroll, John MEditor},
interhash = {ec3445a8f15e4996ec65c5903895494f},
intrahash = {df4b250cfed15a430f85471eec3b7fcb},
journal = {Computer Supported Cooperative Work},
keywords = {expert_finder recommender},
number = {4-5},
pages = {431--465},
publisher = {Springer},
timestamp = {2011-06-18T10:51:08.000+0200},
title = {Expert Recommender: Designing for a Network Organization},
url = {http://www.springerlink.com/index/10.1007/s10606-007-9055-2},
volume = 16,
year = 2007
}