Supporting Organizational Learning with Collaborative Annotation
Ala Atrash, Marie-H
´
el
`
ene Abel and Claude Moulin
Heudiasyc, UMR CNRS 7253, Universit
´
e de Technologie de Compi
`
egne,
Centre de Recherches de Royallieu, BP 20529, 60205 Compiegne cedex, France
Keywords:
Collaboration, Organizational Learning, Semantic Modeling, Ontology, Annotation, Collaborative Annota-
tion.
Abstract:
Many research studies have shown that the organizational learning is a key factor that contributes to the well
being of the organization. The process of organizational learning is affected by the collaborative annotation
which plays an important role in it. However, current collaborative annotation platforms have a common
limitation which is the restricted ability to share, index, retrieve annotations as any other information resource
(e.g a document). In this paper, we define the annotation and we indicate how it becomes collaborative. We
present an original semantic model (MEMORAe-core 2) for collaboration and information sharing and we
show how the annotation is modeled as information resource. We present a web platform (MEMORAe) that
uses this semantic model. A use case for the use of this platform within small and medium sized enterprise is
also detailed. Within this work, our objective is to support the organizational learning by concentrating on the
exchange of ideas by means of the collaborative annotation.
1 INTRODUCTION
In this current uncertain economical situation, orga-
nizations should do their best to stay competitive.
(Alavi et al., 2010) affirms that organizations which
learn can have a good competitive situation. (Huber,
1991) argues that organizational learning consists of
four points: knowledge acquisition, knowledge shar-
ing, knowledge interpretation and knowledge storage.
Facilitating the knowledge sharing is done by orga-
nizing the knowledge in order to be communicable
and integrable (Duncan, 1979). This means that the
knowledge should be represented in a comprehen-
sible and distributable manner and should be saved
in an accessible and consistent organizational mem-
ory. Many research studies pointed out the useful-
ness of collaborative annotation for facilitating learn-
ing within organizations. Current annotation taking
platforms do not take into consideration the aspects
of organizational learning. A common limitation of
these platforms is the restricted ability to share / re-
trieve annotations (Su et al., 2010). This is because
the annotations in these platforms are disconnected
from the information system and they are only acces-
sible in the annotation system. As a result, the an-
notations could not be indexed as any other informa-
tion resources (e.g., a document). This means that the
annotations are not accessible / visible like other re-
sources. In order to overcome these limitations, we
propose to consider the annotation as being an infor-
mation resource in its own right. This would facil-
itate the sharing, indexing, retrieving of the annota-
tions which in turns facilitates the implementing of
the collaborative annotation. As a consequence, the
collaborative annotation promotes knowledge circula-
tion within organizations. This leads to the applying
of the four points presented by (Huber, 1991): knowl-
edge acquisition, sharing, interpretation and storage.
As a result, the organizational learning is supported
by implementing the collaborative annotation within
organizations.
In this paper, we define the collaborative anno-
tation and we justify the role it plays for enhancing
organizational learning section 2. Current collabora-
tive annotation tools are presented in section 3. We
present MEMORAe-core 2 model and MEMORAe
web platform in section 4. A use case example is pre-
sented in section 5. We discuss the advantages of this
web platform over other collaborative annotation plat-
forms in section 6. Conclusion and future work are in
section 7.
237
Atrash A., Abel M. and Moulin C..
Supporting Organizational Learning with Collaborative Annotation.
DOI: 10.5220/0005082602370244
In Proceedings of the International Conference on Knowledge Management and Information Sharing (KMIS-2014), pages 237-244
ISBN: 978-989-758-050-5
Copyright
c
2014 SCITEPRESS (Science and Technology Publications, Lda.)
2 COLLABORATIVE
ANNOTATION
2.1 Annotation Definition
(Oren et al., 2006) defines the annotation as being a
relation between the annotated data and the annotat-
ing data, this relation has a type and is done in a par-
ticular context. (Bringay et al., 2005) defines the an-
notation as: A particular note linked to a target. The
target can be an other annotation, a collection of doc-
uments, a document or a document segment (a para-
graph, a phrase, an image, a part of an image, etc.)”.
(Slimani, 2013) precises four domains on which the
annotation could be applied:
Document annotation: It is the annotation of doc-
uments or part of them. Users can take notes,
comments, remarks, etc. and share them with oth-
ers.
Wiki annotation: Wikis are collaborative author-
ing of a particular content. Authors could con-
tribute by adding, modifying or deleting the con-
tent. Authors could add annotations to describe
the wiki. Annotations are added on page level to
describe the whole wiki page.
Blog annotation: A blog is a website or on-
line journal owned by an individual who regu-
larly writes posts which are presented in reverse
chronological order. Contributors to a blog could
write comments to a particular post. An annota-
tion in a blog is a statement about a post. For
example, posts are classified with simple cate-
gories “sport”, “research”, “teaching”, etc. (Sli-
mani, 2013) considers that blog posts are anno-
tated with these categories.
Tagging: Tags are descriptive terms (e.g., key-
words). For example, Flickr allows a tagging to
a particular image to describe its content (e.g.,
“car” for a car image). (Slimani, 2013) consid-
ers that tags express some unspecified relation be-
tween the resource and whatever the term refers
to.
The annotation granularity and form are terms
used in the annotation definition. So we need to define
these terms
Annotation granularity (also called “scope” )
(Sazedj and Pinto, 2005) indicates if the annotated
data is a whole resource (e.g., a document) or part
of a it (e.g., a section inside a document, a sen-
tence, etc.). When the granularity is high, the an-
notation could be done to any part of the resource.
The form of the annotation (Euzenat, 2002) indi-
cates the type of annotation, a textual object or a
structured object. Textual annotation has a plain
text form. Structured annotation could be a link
to a structured object (e.g., html page, xml, rdf,
etc.)
According to us, the annotation is an information
resource in its own right. We define an annotation
as the “transcription of an idea that have a particular
target and a body which is somehow about the tar-
get”. We consider that the annotation could have a
high granularity (Sazedj and Pinto, 2005). This means
that it would be possible to annotate the resource itself
or any part of it.
2.2 Collaborative Annotation Definition
Collaborative annotation is the process of annotat-
ing a particular resource by several users within a
collaborative environment (Petasis, 2012). Within
“Palimpsest
1
project, the collaborative annotation is
the process of adding a comment to a shared space
(e.g., a document), this comment is either a note, an
explanation or a criticism attached to a particular text.
In collaborative annotation, the users have access to
the shared resource on which they could add their an-
notation. Users also have access to other annotations
of the shared resource.
According to us, the collaborative annotation
takes place when the annotation itself is shared be-
tween individuals who have access to the annotated
resource. In this case, the annotations could have an
impact on individuals who view it. This annotation
could be written by a single author or multi authors.
The annotation becomes collaborative when its con-
tent is shared between the collaborators. The anno-
tation “Body” could have different forms (Euzenat,
2002): plain text, a document, a chat, etc. When the
annotation “Body” is a chat, a wiki or a forum, the
annotation is necessarily written by multi authors.
2.3 The Role of Collaborative
Annotation in the Organizational
Learning Process
As mentioned earlier, the organizational learning is
done by supporting knowledge sharing and retrieval
within an organization. The fact that collaborative an-
notations are shared between users promotes the orga-
nizational learning. The annotations within a collabo-
rative environment reflects the opinions of the annota-
1
http://www.programhouse.com/pal/
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238
tors about a particular resource. An already annotated
resource allows a better understanding of it.
Many research studies illustrated the usefulness
of collaborative annotation for facilitating learning
within organizations. For example (Nokelainen et al.,
2003) affirms that collaborative annotation motivates
the individuals ability to learn which in turns en-
hances the organizational learning process. (Marshall
and Brush, 2004) indicates that collaborative annota-
tion provides an opportunity to facilitate making indi-
vidual knowledge a public one. As a consequence, the
annotations’ knowledge value is accumulated when
these annotations are shared. The experiment of (Su
et al., 2010) shows us how a collaborative annotation
web platform facilitates knowledge circulation and re-
trieval between individuals within a collaborative en-
vironment. As a result, sharing the annotations by
a collaborative annotation platform within an organi-
zation plays an important role in the organizational
learning process.
3 CURRENT COLLABORATIVE
ANNOTATION TOOLS
Most of the collaborative annotation tools are web
based applications (e.g PAMS 2.0 (Su et al., 2010))
and few of them are desktop ones (Petasis, 2012)
(e.g., SYNC3
2
). For example, Annotea (Kahan and
Koivunen, 2001), Bounce
3
, Diigo
4
, iComment
5
and
MyStickies
6
are extensions that could be added to a
web browser in order to annotate web resources (e.g.,
HTML pages, images). These extensions run inside
the browser along with a centralized server (to store
the annotations). Usually, these annotations are text
fields where users can type anything they wish. The
user of these tools can be part of one or more groups
whose members have access to the annotations of this
user (Petasis, 2012). Some tools allow the annota-
tion to collaborative environments (e.g., wikis, blogs).
Taking wiki annotations, we can mention WikSAR
(Aumueller, 2005), IkeWiki (Schaffert, 2006) and
SemperWiki (Oren, 2005). Most of wiki annotations
tools allow annotations only to a whole wiki page.
This is the same case in blog annotation tools where
annotations are done to the blog posts. For blog an-
notations, we can mention semiBlog (M
¨
oller et al.,
2005), HP Semantic Blogging demonstrator (Cayzer,
2
http://www.sync3.eu
3
http://www.bounceapp.com/
4
http://www.diigo.com/
5
http://www.icomment.com/
6
http://www.mystickies.com/
2004).
None of the presented annotation tools consider
the annotation as an information resource in its own
right. The annotation in these tools is an integral part
of the annotated resource. As a result, the annotation
itself is not indexed and in order to find it is necessary
to search the annotated resource. In addition, none of
these tools support the annotation that has a structured
object like a chat, a forum or a wiki. The only anno-
tation form (Euzenat, 2002) supported is the textual
annotation. In order to solve the annotation indexing
problem, we consider the annotation as information
resource in its own right. So the annotation could it-
self be indexed, shared, retrieved, etc. the same way
we do to index, share, retrieve, etc. a particular re-
source (e.g., a document). We also offer a new way
to create collaborative annotation. This is done by
supporting annotations that have structured form like
chat, wiki or forum pages.
4 COLLABORATIVE
ANNOTATION WITHIN
MEMORAE APPROACH
The main objective of MEMORAe approach is to
manage heterogeneous information resources within
organizations. The approach is comprised of a se-
mantic model (called MEMORAe-core 2) and a web
platform (called MEMORAe) which is based on the
semantic model. The model and the platform make
together a support to enhance the process of organiza-
tional learning. The details are in the following sec-
tions.
4.1 The Annotation within
MEMORAe-core 2 Model
4.1.1 Describing MEMORAe-core 2 Model
MEMORAe-core 2 semantic model (Fig. 1) con-
tains the concepts that describe “how we collaborate”.
MEMORAe-core 2 is built using owl (Web Ontology
Language). The model focuses on information re-
sources shared between individuals and groups of in-
dividuals within an organization. There are two main
aspects in MEMORAe-core 2 :
Modeling the individuals and groups of individ-
uals: The organization in MEMORAe-core 2
model is a set of members. These members are
potential users of the MEMORAe web platform.
Each user belongs to one or more groups and each
group has its own sharing space in which users
SupportingOrganizationalLearningwithCollaborativeAnnotation
239
Figure 1: MEMORAe-core 2 model.
can share or access information resources.
Modeling the information resources: The re-
sources in MEMORAe-core 2 are defined as “vec-
tors of information”. The resources are divided
into two main categories: simple and composed.
A document, an agent, a note can be direct exam-
ples of simple resources. Composed resources are
composed of other resources (e.g: a note cluster
is composed of one or more notes). Each resource
is indexed by an index key which is visible for a
certain sharing space. The model supports docu-
mentary resources and social resources (e.g., chat,
forum, wiki).
MEMORAe-core 2 model uses the following seman-
tic web standards (Deparis et al., 2014):
SIOC (Semantically-Interlinked Online Commu-
nities): It aims to enable the integration of online
community information (Breslin et al., 2009)
FOAF (Friend Of A Friend): It describes persons,
their activities and their relations to other people
and objects (Brickley and Miller, 2010).
BIBO (Bibliographic): It describes the biblio-
graphic resources (DArcus and Giasson, 2009).
4.1.2 Modeling the Annotation
The modeling of the annotation concept in
MEMORAe-core 2 model is based on the Open
Annotation
7
standard of W3C. The annotation
concept is added to MEMORAe-core 2 model as an
information resource in its own right so it is a subclass
of “mc2:Resource” concept. Each annotation has an
author, a type, an index, a “Target” and a “Body”. It is
the annotation itself that links the annotation “Target”
(the annotated data) with the annotation “Body” (the
annotating data). The annotation is created by a
“mc2:User”. The type of the annotation indicates
its nature (a comment, an explanation, a reference,
a question, a discussion). The annotation “Target”
(filler of the “mc2:hasTarget” object property) could
be any concept in the model. This means that the
“Target” could be an agent, a document, a forum
post, a chat session file, a wiki page or any “Thing”
in MEMORAe-core 2 model. The annotation “Body”
is somehow “about” the “Target” of the annotation.
The “Body” of the annotation could be any resource
“mc2:Resource” of the model. The annotation (as
any other resource) is indexed by an index key
“mc2:IndexKey” which is visible for a sharing space
“mc2:Space”. The annotation becomes collaborative
when this space has two or more members who could
view it.
7
http://www.w3.org/ns/oa
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Figure 2: MEMORAe web platform.
4.2 The Annotation within MEMORAe
Web Platform
4.2.1 Describing MEMORAe Web Platform
MEMORAe is a prototype web platform which is
developed using web 2.0 technologies and based on
MEMORAe-core 2 model. The platform aims to fa-
cilitate knowledge sharing within organizations. All
types of resources are indexed by one or more con-
cepts of a semantic map (Fig. 2) which is shared
among all users. The semantic map is the graphi-
cal representation of an ontology that represents the
specific terms of an organization. This semantic map
is built by importing the ontology file (which could
be generated by an ontology editor e.g., prot
´
eg
´
e) into
the platform. This ontology describes “about what
we collaborate” and it differs from one organization
to another. In order to retrieve the resources indexed
by a particular concept, the user choses the desired
indexing concept from the semantic map. This con-
cept is then placed in the middle of the screen and its
color changes indicating that this is the “focus con-
cept”. If the user shares a particular resource, by de-
fault the resource is indexed by the “focus concept”.
The users could also add other indexing concepts of
the resource. The sharing spaces of the user could
be viewed in parallel while navigating through the se-
mantic map. This parallel view of sharing spaces is
advantageous because the user can view in parallel
the resources shared between different sharing spaces
(different groups) but indexed by the same concept
(the “focus concept”). This parallel view also permits
the user to easily transfer a resource from one sharing
space to another by means of “drag and drop”. In this
case, the resource is not physically duplicated in the
hosting server. It only becomes visible / accessible by
both sharing spaces.
4.2.2 Taking Annotation in MEMORAe Web
Platform
The user of the platform can annotate information re-
sources including documents, parts of them, notes,
other annotations, etc. There are two ways to access
the annotations, either when opening the annotated re-
source or directly through the resources list of the the
sharing space. An example of the first way to access
the annotation is when the user opens a document,
he/she could retrieve all the annotations of this doc-
ument which are shared in a sharing space to which
he/she has access (cf.1 in Fig. 3). In order to create
a new annotation, the user choses the text that he/she
wants to annotate, precises the annotation type, the
indexing concept(s) (Fig. 3). The user should also
choose a sharing space to which he/she has access and
in which the document is shared. The user then writes
SupportingOrganizationalLearningwithCollaborativeAnnotation
241
Figure 3: Annotations in a document.
the content of the annotation and adds it. The selected
text is the annotation “Target” and the content of the
annotation is its “Body”. The user can not only add
annotations, but also filter the annotations of the docu-
ment thanks to the search tool (cf.2 in Fig. 3) which is
integrated to the document viewer. With such a tool,
it is possible to filter the annotations of the document
by type, date, author, indexing concept, sharing space
(to which the user has access), etc. The second way
to access the annotation is through its related sharing
space. This is because the annotation is modeled as
an information resource in its own right so it is ac-
cessible in the related sharing spaces when the “focus
concept” is the annotation’s indexing concept. When
the user clicks on an annotation which is visible in
the sharing space, the annotation is opened within its
annotated resource. This means that the resource is
being accessible by its annotations which are indexed
by the concepts of the semantic map.
5 A USE CASE WITHIN “TOUR
EQUIPEMENT” ENTERPRISE
“Tour Equipement” is a small enterprise (14 em-
ployed persons) which is specialized in the mechani-
cal production with 50 years of experience. The enter-
prise is situated in the Picardy region in France. The
enterprise hierarchy is composed of: owner-manager,
technical manager, production manager, commercial
manager and administrative manger. In addition,
there are 9 blue-collar workers in the workshop. The
process of organizational learning is highly affected
by the size of the organization. So this process is spe-
cific and needs a none traditional approach in SMEs
(Atrash et al., 2013). This is due to the significant rel-
ative “weight” of each member in SMEs (Mahe. de
Boislandelle, 1996). As a consequence, one mem-
ber could play multiple roles at the same time. This
multitasking is a fundamental aspect that have an im-
pact on the organizational learning in SMEs. In ad-
dition, there are very few hierarchical levels with di-
rect supervision and coordination between the mem-
bers. As a result, employees and the owner-manager
have direct interaction and this coordination is usu-
ally more made in the action than based on prescrip-
tions and codified rules (Tsai, 2007). Two interview
sessions with “Tour Equipement” employees have re-
cently took place in order to identify the special need
for managing its knowledge. The first session focused
on the main task held by each employee. The second
session concentrated to retrieve their daily practices.
This field study illustrated that the employees tend to
take a lot of annotations during their daily work. As
mentioned in section 2.3, sharing the annotations be-
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242
tween the members of an organization supports the
process of organizational learning within this orga-
nization. As a consequence, MEMORAe web plat-
form with its collaborative annotation functionalities
and its semantic model seemed an adequate solu-
tion which is dedicated to “Tour Equipement” need.
MEMORAe web platform allows “Tour Equipement”
employees not only to annotate documents (invoices,
plans, images of the designed products), but also to
share these annotations among each other.
To take a concrete example of using MEMORAe
web platform within “Tour Equipement” enterprise,
let’s suppose that following scenario:
1. The technical manager belongs to the “workshop”
group. He/she shares a document that describes a
particular order of a product.
2. The technical manager indexes the document by
the “jaw chuck” concept of the semantic map
(supposing that the “jaw chuck” is the ordered
product).
3. While the production manager (who is also a
member of the “workshop” group) is reading
the document shared by technical manger, he/she
finds a sentence that also corresponds to another
type of chucks called “collet chuck”.
4. The production manager decides to annotate the
document by a commentary saying “This is also
applicable for the collet chucks”.
5. The production manager choses the sentence and
adds his/her annotation. By considering this an-
notation as an information resource, the produc-
tion manager could share his annotation with oth-
ers. The annotation could be shared only in the
sharing space of the containing document (“work-
shop” group in this case).
6. The production manager choses to index his an-
notation by the “collet chuck” concept of the se-
mantic map.
7. Now this annotation is visible / accessible by the
members of “workshop” group when the “focus
concept” is “collet chucks” (Fig. 4). The members
of the “workshop” group could see the sentence
chosen by the production manager with his/her
commentary (“This is also applicable for the col-
let chucks”). The members could also open the
containing document if they want.
6 DISCUSSION
Taking back the “Tour Equipement” use case, we rec-
ognize that considering the annotation as an informa-
Figure 4: The annotation visible as an information resource
in its sharing space.
tion resource enabled the production manager to share
and index his/her annotation in order to be accessible
by others. The members of “workshop” sharing space
were able to access the document by the annotation
of the production manager. With other collaborative
learning platforms, the annotation of the production
manager is considered to be as an integral or com-
plementary part of the document. As a result, the in-
dexing and sharing of the annotation is not possible
and the only way to access the annotations is to open
the annotated document itself. Our platform has over-
come this limitation of annotation sharing by model-
ing this latter as an information resource in its own
right. The annotation itself is accessible as being an
information resource in the sharing space.
7 CONCLUSION AND FUTURE
WORK
This paper presented an original semantic model that
models the annotation as an information resource in
its own right. This enables to share and index the an-
notation separately from the annotated resource. The
model allows to create annotations that have a chat, a
forum or a wiki “Body”. We presented MEMORAe
web platform for collaboration that uses MEMORAe-
core 2 model as a base. We illustrated how this plat-
form implements and facilitates the collaborative an-
SupportingOrganizationalLearningwithCollaborativeAnnotation
243
notation. This would support the circulation of ideas
which in turns enhances the process of organizational
learning. Future work could be done by applying the
work of (Li et al., 2012) to capitalize the traces of
annotation-taking activities that took place within the
enterprise.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We would like to thank the Picardy region for financ-
ing this project.
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