Special Article
Journal of the Operational Research Society (2003) 54, 914–923. doi:10.1057/palgrave.jors.2601592
Belief revision and organisational knowledge dynamics
G Tselekidis1, P Peppas2 and M-a Williams3
- 1University of Patras, Patras, Greece
- 2AIT-Athens Information Technology, Athens, Greece
- 3University of Technology, Sydney, Australia
Correspondence: P Peppas, Athens Information Technology, Markopoulou Avenue, Peania, Athens 19002, Greece. E-mail: ppep@ait.gr
Received July 2002; Accepted February 2003.
Abstract
It is widely accepted nowadays that the ability of a firm to display sustained competitive advantage, relies heavily on its efficiency in managing organisational knowledge, and keeping it up-to-date with internal and external developments. It is therefore imperative to develop a deeper understanding of organisational knowledge evolution. In this paper, we propose the use of methods and techniques from the area of Belief Revision in studying organisational knowledge dynamics. Belief Revision lies at the intersection of Formal Philosophy and Computer Science, and studies the process by which a rational agent changes her beliefs in the light of new information. The formal models that have been developed in this area are intuitive and elegant, and in this paper we show how they can be imported into the context of organisational knowledge management.
Keywords:
organisational studies, management, dynamic capabilities, artificial intelligence




