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El. knyga: Knowledge Management, Arts, and Humanities: Interdisciplinary Approaches and the Benefits of Collaboration

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This book presents a series of studies that demonstrate the value of interactions between knowledge management with the arts and humanities. The carefully compiled chapters show, on the one hand, how traditional methods from the arts and humanities – e.g. theatrical improvisation, clay modelling, theory of aesthetics – can be used to enhance knowledge creation and evolution. On the other, the chapters discuss knowledge management models and practices such as virtual knowledge space (BA) design, social networking and knowledge sharing, data mining and knowledge discovery tools. The book also demonstrates how these practices can yield valuable benefits in terms of organizing and analyzing big arts and humanities data in a digital environment.
Introduction: Knowledge Management, Arts and Humanities: Setting the
Scene.- Arts and Humanities in Knowledge Management: Clay Workshop as a
Method for Recognising and Creating Individual Knowledge.- Understanding and
Fostering Collective Ideation: An Improvisation-based Method.- What Can
Knowledge Creating Organisations Learn from Theatrical Improvision?.-
Transferring Cultural Knowledge Through Arts: Two Digital Stories.- Aesthetic
Knowledge Diagrams: Bridging Understanding and Communication.- Knowledge
Management in Arts and Humanities: Humanists' Virtual Knowledge Space: Model
and Usage.- Managing Archaeological Knowledge in Digital Environment.- Poetry
Visualisation in Digital Technology.- What Can Social Media Data Add to the
Knowledge of Arts and Humanities? An Empirical Investigation on Twitter at
Teatro Alla Scala.- Intellectual Capital of the Cultural Heritage Ecosystems:
A Knowledge Dynamics Approach.- Conclusion: Beyond Lessons Learned:
Opportunities and Challenges for Interplay Between Knowledge Management, Arts
and Humanities in the Digital Age. 
Meliha Handzic is Professor of management and information systems at the International Burch University, Sarajevo. Her PhD is from the University of New South Wales, Sydney. Prof. Handzics main research interests lie in the areas of knowledge management and decision support. She has published on these topics in leading journals and books, and is the co-editor of the Springer series 'Knowledge Management and Organizational Learning'. Daniela Carlucci, PhD in business management, is Assistant Professor at the University of Basilicata, Italy. Her research interests focus on knowledge assets and intellectual capital management, project and performance management, decision support and arts in business. She has authored and co-authored over 100 publications on a range of research topics.