Figure 4: Workspace demo for Case 3 b).
all the elements indexed with the “Power supply”
topic will be retrieved, as well as the elements
indexed with topics having a relation to the “Power
supply” topic.
6 CONCLUSIONS
In this paper we have shown the contribution of tacit
knowledge in accomplishing tasks during railway
product development. In the context of a specific
activity like the “technical analysis” we detailed the
problems generated by the loss of tacit knowledge
which can arise when knowledge is not capitalized,
an employee leaves the company or he changes his
function. We think the loss of knowledge can be
overcome through a workspace favouring
organisational learning. We concluded that this
workspace has to sustain three processes: an
individual learning process, a social process for
collaborative learning and a knowledge management
process. Based on the analysis of needs, we deduced
that these processes will be supported by: 1) the
workbench helping employees to accomplish their
analysis 2) the communication component allowing
socialization and collaboration, 3) the knowledge
management component unifying the previous two
and allowing to capitalize knowledge by classifying
it into topics. According to the use cases revealed
during the interviews we defined a set of
requirements which were further used to realize a
first modelling of the workspace. As this model is
not complete, our next goal is the refinement of the
model.
Our future work will equally consist in the
implementation of this model. In the section “related
work” we presented some of the possibilities of
putting into practice our proposal, but these
tools/technologies cannot fully respond to the
requirements of our workspace (especially regarding
the annotation of resources, which should be
supported by the workbench). It is for this reason
that we are looking forward for means to develop
our proposal.
REFERENCES
Abel, M.-H., Leblanc, A., (2009a). Knowledge Sharing
via the E-MEMORAe2.0 Platform. In Proceedings
of 6th International Conference on Intellectual
Capital, Knowledge Management & Organisational
Learning, Montreal Canada, pp. 10-19, ACI, 10.
Abel, M.-H., Leblanc, A., (2009b). A web plaform for
innovation process facilitation. In IC3K 2009
International Joint Conference on Knowledge
Discovery, Knowledge Engineering and Knowledge
Management, Madeira Portugal, pp. 141-146, ACM,
10.
Birk A., Heller G., John I., Schmid K., Maßen von der T.,
Müller K., (2003). Product Line Engineering: The
State of the Practice. In IEEE Software, pp. 52-60,
November/December.
Boughzala I. And Ermine J.-L (2006). Trends in
Enterprise Knowledge Management. USA: ISTE.
Büchner, T., Matthes, F., Neubert, C., (2009). A Concept
and Service Based Analysis of Commercial and Open
Source Enterprise 2.0 Tools. In: Proceedings of the 1th
International Conference on Knowledge Management
and Information Sharing, Madeira, Portugal, pp. 37-
45.
Dieng R., Corby O., Giboin A., Ribière M. (1998).
Methods and Tools for Corporate Knowledge
Management. In Proceedings of the Eleventh
Workshop on Knowledge Acquisition, Modeling and
Management (KAW’98), Banff, Alberta, Canada, 17-
23.
Garrot-Lavoué E., (2009). Interconnection of
Communities of Practice: A Web Platform for
Knowledge Management.
In International Conference on Knowledge
Management and Information Sharing (KMIS 2009),
Madeira, Portugal, 6-8 October 2009, p. 13-20.
Leblanc, A., Abel, M. (2009). Linking Semantic Web and
Web 2.0 for Learning Resources Management. In
Proceedings of the 2nd World Summit on the
Knowledge Society: Visioning and Engineering the
Knowledge Society. A Web Science Perspective,
Chania, Crete, Greece, September 16 - 18.
McAfee, Andrew P., (2006). "Enterprise 2.0: The Dawn of
Emergent Collaboration", In Sloan Management
Review 47 (3): 21–28.
Nonaka I., Takeuchi H. , (1995). The knowledge-creating
company : How Japanese companies create the
dynamics of innovation. Oxford University Press,
New York.
REQUIREMENTS AND MODELLING OF A WORKSPACE FOR TACIT KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT IN
RAILWAY PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT
69