Collaborative reputation mechanisms for electronic marketplaces
Decision Support Systems - Special issue for business to business electronic commerce, issues and solutions
Harvard Business Review on Knowledge Management
Harvard Business Review on Knowledge Management
Knowledge Sharing Agents Over the World Wide Web
BT Technology Journal
Working Knowledge: How Organizations Manage What They Know
Working Knowledge: How Organizations Manage What They Know
Knowledge-sharing and influence in online social networks via viral marketing
Communications of the ACM - Mobile computing opportunities and challenges
Encouraging knowledge exchange in discussion forums by market-oriented mechanisms
Proceedings of the 2004 ACM symposium on Applied computing
Discovery of knowledge flow in science
Communications of the ACM - Two decades of the language-action perspective
Trust in Knowledge Flow Networks
SKG '05 Proceedings of the First International Conference on Semantics, Knowledge and Grid
The potential energy of knowledge flow: Research Articles
Concurrency and Computation: Practice & Experience - Progress of the Knowledge Grid (SKG2005)
Integrating knowledge flow mining and collaborative filtering to support document recommendation
Journal of Systems and Software
Knowledge-based virtual organizations for the E-decisional community
KES'10 Proceedings of the 14th international conference on Knowledge-based and intelligent information and engineering systems: Part II
Building adaptive systems for collaborative e-work: the e-workbench approach
Intelligent Decision Technologies - Special issue on knowledge-based environments and services in human-computer interaction
Group and link analysis of multi-relational scientific social networks
Journal of Systems and Software
Discovering role-based virtual knowledge flows for organizational knowledge support
Decision Support Systems
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A knowledge service consists of systematic knowledge and the mechanism of using knowledge to perform a task. The supply of knowledge services forms a knowledge service layer over the knowledge flow network formed by free knowledge sharing. To stimulate the supply of knowledge services, this paper proposes a virtual knowledge service market by establishing reward and reputation mechanisms. Simulations demonstrate that a team with the market mechanism performs better than those without it. The virtual knowledge service market provides an experimental platform for exploring the rules of knowledge service such as the impact of individual behavior on states of individual and team as well as the change of the states.