DocumentCode
979390
Title
A formal methodology for acquiring and representing expert knowledge
Author
Cooke, Nancy M. ; McDonald, James E.
Author_Institution
New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, NM, USA
Volume
74
Issue
10
fYear
1986
Firstpage
1422
Lastpage
1430
Abstract
The process of eliciting knowledge from human experts and representing that knowledge in an expert or knowledge-based system suffers from numerous problems. Not only is this process time-consuming and tedious, but the weak knowledge acquisition methods typically used (i.e., interviews and protocol analysis) are inadequate for eliciting tacit knowledge and may, in fact, lead to inaccuracies in the knowledge base. In addition, the intended knowledge representation scheme guides the acquisition of knowledge resulting in a representation-driven knowledge base as opposed to one that is knowledge-driven. In this paper, a formal methodology is proposed that employs techniques from the field of cognitive psychology to uncover expert knowledge as well as an appropriate representation of that knowledge. The advantages of such a methodology are discussed, as well as results from studies concerning the elicitation of concepts from experts and the assignment of labels to links in empirically derived semantic networks.
Keywords
Diagnostic expert systems; Expert systems; Humans; Knowledge acquisition; Knowledge engineering; Knowledge representation; Knowledge transfer; Problem-solving; Protocols; Psychology;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Proceedings of the IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9219
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/PROC.1986.13643
Filename
1457911
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