A Descriptive Framework for the Field of Knowledge Management
Date
2020-07-16Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Despite the extensive evolution of knowledge management (KM), the field lacks an integrated
description. This situation leads to difficulties in research, teaching, and learning. To bridge
this gap, this study surveys 2842 articles from top-ranked KM journals to provide a descriptive
framework that guides future research in the field of knowledge management. This study also
seeks to provide a comprehensive depiction of current research in the field and categorizes
these research activities into higher-level categories using grounded theory approach and
topic modeling technique. The results show that KM studies are classified into four core
research categories: technological, business, people, and domains/applications dimensions.
An additional concern addressed in this study is the major research methodologies used
in this field. The results raise awareness of the development of KM discipline and hold
implications for research methodologies and research trends in the selected KM journals.
The results obtained from this study also provide practitioners with a useful quality reference
source. The framework and the components included provide researchers, practitioners, and
educators with an ontology of KM topics, where they can cover deficiencies in research and
provide an agenda for future research.
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- Accounting & Information Systems [527 items ]