An editor for the conceptual models of interactive knowledge-acquisition tools
International Journal of Man-Machine Studies
KADS: a modelling approach to knowledge engineering
Knowledge Acquisition - Special issue on the KADS approach to knowledge engineering
Task modeling with reusable problem-solving methods
Artificial Intelligence
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies - Special issue: the Sisyphus-VT initiative
Solving VT in VITAL: a study in model construction and knowledge reuse
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies - Special issue: the Sisyphus-VT initiative
Episodic refinement of episodic skeletal-plan refinement
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies - Special issue on knowledge acquisition for planning
Knowledge engineering and management: the CommonKADS methodology
Knowledge engineering and management: the CommonKADS methodology
Situated Cognition: On Human Knowledge and Computer Representations
Situated Cognition: On Human Knowledge and Computer Representations
The evolution of Protégé: an environment for knowledge-based systems development
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Software-engineering challenges of building and deploying reusable problem solvers
Artificial Intelligence for Engineering Design, Analysis and Manufacturing
Knowledge acquisition: Past, present and future
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Reflections on 25+ years of knowledge acquisition
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Situated cognition and knowledge acquisition research
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
From knowledge science to symbiosis science
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Software architecture knowledge for intelligent light maintenance
Advances in Engineering Software
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Intense interest in knowledge-acquisition research began 25 years ago, stimulated by the excitement about knowledge-based systems that emerged in the 1970s followed by the realities of the ''AI Winter'' that arrived in the 1980s. The knowledge-acquisition workshops that responded to this interest led to the formation of a vibrant research community that has achieved remarkable consensus on a number of issues. These viewpoints include (1) the rejection of the notion of knowledge as a commodity to be transferred from one locus to another, (2) an acceptance of the situated nature of human expertise, (3) emphasis on knowledge acquisition as the modeling of problem solving, and (4) the pursuit of reusable patterns in problem solving and in domain descriptions that can facilitate both modeling and system implementation. The Semantic Web community will benefit greatly by incorporating these perspectives in its work.