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People-Focused Knowledge Management
Weick (1995) treated Sensemaking in general and specifically within
the organization. Lakoff (1987) explained that, to provide a foun-
dation for discrimination of what is important and what is not, Sense-
making builds on extensive categorization of the important aspects
of the target situation.
The cognitive processes by which a person observes and forms
an understanding of a situation — be it static or dynamic — are
complicated. The processes proceed through
sequential steps and
iterations as relevant information about the situation is gathered,
analyzed, and interpreted. The Sensemaking task relies on Situation
Recognition Model knowledge as discussed later in this chapter.
Additional forms of knowledge are also used. These, as indicated in
Appendix C, include facts, concepts, rules, and expectations. Per-
sonal Situation Recognition models are primarily mental reference
models that exist in the minds of people at different conceptual levels
as was discussed in Chapter 4. The models
can be highly concrete
(though, at the same time, both automatized and tacit) for routine
tasks, more generalized operational models for familiar but less
automatized tasks, or generalized scripts and schemata for broader
or less familiar tasks. More general reference models are also
possessed as metaknowledge — either procedural or declarative
metaknowledge. These models provide abstract strategies,
features,
and structures applicable to the domain and serve as the basis for
operationalization in the new context.
Many factors can affect Sensemaking , some positively and others
negatively, as indicated in Table 5-1. Attention is an important factor
that determines the degree to which situations are observed and pri-
oritized (Davenport & Beck 2001). Lack of attention may even lead
to important information — or whole situations — being overlooked
or ignored. Also, the person or the enterprise
may refuse to accept
information that describes a situation. That may happen when infor-
mation is considered to be unbelievable for some reason, or if it
describes a threatening situation that the person wants to avoid and
may therefore tacitly ignore (Sherman & Cohen 2002). Sensemaking
also involves the “leaping to conclusions” problems: the person
prematurely and erroneously assumes that the target situation fits a
previously known pattern when that is not the case.
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