Temporal Convergence for Knowledge Management

Authors

  • Christopher Phillip Martin Land Operations Division, Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO), Department of Defence, Australian Government
  • Wayne Philp Land Operations Division, Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO), Department of Defence, Australian Government
  • William P Hall Australian Centre for Science, Innovation and Society at the University of Melbourne

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3127/ajis.v15i2.207

Keywords:

temporal convergence, temporal divergence, stochastic future, intentional future, situation image bifurcation

Abstract

Time and knowledge have tended to be conceptualised in conventional knowledge management systems as either ‘timeless’ recordings of procedures, or time-stamped records of past events and states. The concept of temporal convergence was previously developed to help apply knowledge-management theory to complex military processes such as commander’s intent, shared situation awareness, and self-synchronisation. This paper clarifies the concept and introduces several others in forming a framework to assist discussion and exploration of the types of knowledge required for complex endeavours, such as warfighting, characterised by opposition and uncertainty. The approach is grounded in a pragmatist philosophy and constructivist epistemology. Argument proceeds along mathematical lines from a basis that the types of knowledge most valuable to goal-directed agents in uncertain environments can be modelled as directed graph topologies. The framework is shown to be useful in describing and reasoning about the knowledge requirements and prerequisites for distributed decision-making through the sharing of situational knowledge and common intentions, with practical application to the planning and execution of operations. To the designers of knowledge management systems seeking to address this space, it presents a challenge that cannot be addressed merely by construction, storage, search and retrieval of documents and records pertaining to the past.

Author Biographies

Christopher Phillip Martin, Land Operations Division, Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO), Department of Defence, Australian Government

Christopher Martin is a systems analyst and developer for Land Operations Division, Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO). From early interests in linguistics, ecology and ethology, he eventually stumbled across computer science and psychology and applied these fields to research in mathematics education and teacher-training. He also taught mathematics and computing at secondary and tertiary levels. A decade later in 2001, he joined DSTO where he now works in the domains of information management and robotics. He has a BSc from the University of Queensland and a GradDipEd from the University of Western Sydney.

Wayne Philp, Land Operations Division, Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO), Department of Defence, Australian Government

Wayne Philp is an applied physicist and systems analyst for Land Operations Division, Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO). Wayne had an early career as a Naval Officer (BSc., UNSW, 1975) and teacher (DipEd., UMelb, 1985) followed by a PhD in Optical Physics (VUT, 1994) and a Senior Research Fellowship in Optoelectronics at University of Strathclyde (Glasgow, 1995-96). Since 1997, Wayne has been employed by the Australian Department of Defence as Head of Support System Studies (Adelaide, 2000-04), Scientific Adviser Joint (Canberra, 2004-05) and presently, Head of Land Systems Information Management in Adelaide. In this position he leads DSTO's systems-level analytical support in the design & implementation of options and processes for Knowledge and Information Management of a networked Land force.

William P Hall, Australian Centre for Science, Innovation and Society at the University of Melbourne

William (Bill) Hall retired July 2007 as a documentation and knowledge management systems analyst. Bill had an early interest in engineering and physics followed by BS in Zoology (San Diego State, 1964) and PhD in Evolutionary Biology (Harvard, 1973). A Melbourne University Fellowship in Genetics (1977-1999) led to studies of epistemology and history and philosophy of science. From 1990 until his retirement, Bill worked for Tenix Defence and its predecessor companies. Bill's recent academic interests began with an Honorary Research Fellowship in Monash University's Faculty of Information Technology from early 2002-June 2005. From 2006 at the University of Melbourne, Bill is National Fellow of the Australian Centre for Science, Innovation and Society, a casual lecturer on engineering knowledge management in the School of Engineering's Masters in Engineering Management program, and informally associated with the OASIS group in the Faculty of Science's Department of Information Systems and the cross-faculty eScholarship Research Centre.

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Published

2009-05-01

How to Cite

Martin, C. P., Philp, W., & Hall, W. P. (2009). Temporal Convergence for Knowledge Management. Australasian Journal of Information Systems, 15(2). https://doi.org/10.3127/ajis.v15i2.207

Issue

Section

Research Articles