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  2. Compendium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compendium

    A compendium may concisely summarize a larger work. In most cases, the body of knowledge will concern a specific field of human interest or endeavour (for example: hydrogeology, logology, ichthyology, phytosociology or myrmecology), while a general encyclopedia can be referred to as a compendium of all human knowledge.

  3. Personal knowledge management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_knowledge_management

    Personal productivity improvement: knowledge fairs and 101 training sessions to help each employee make more effective personal use of the knowledge, learning, and technology resources available in the context of their work; PKM has also been linked to these tools: [citation needed] Email, calendars, task managers; Knowledge logs (k-logs)

  4. Personal knowledge base - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_knowledge_base

    A personal knowledge base (PKB) is an electronic tool used by an individual to express, capture, and later retrieve personal knowledge. It differs from a traditional database in that it contains subjective material particular to the owner, that others may not agree with nor care about.

  5. Outline of knowledge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outline_of_knowledge

    Knowledge base. Personal knowledge base; Knowledge commons; Libraries – a library is a collection of sources of information and similar resources, made accessible to a defined community for reference or borrowing. [18] It provides physical or digital access to material, and may be a physical building or room, or a virtual space, or both. [19]

  6. Experiential knowledge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Experiential_knowledge

    In the philosophy of mind, the phrase often refers to knowledge that can only be acquired through experience, such as, for example, the knowledge of what it is like to see colours, which could not be explained to someone born blind: the necessity of experiential knowledge becomes clear if one was asked to explain to a blind person a colour like blue.

  7. Tacit knowledge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacit_knowledge

    Tacit knowledge or implicit knowledge is knowledge that is difficult to extract or articulate—as opposed to conceptualized, formalized, codified, or explicit knowledge—is more difficult to convey to others through verbalization or writing. Examples of this include individual wisdom, experience, insight, motor skill, and intuition. [1]

  8. Knowledge by acquaintance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knowledge_by_acquaintance

    Whereas knowledge by description is something like ordinary propositional knowledge (e.g. "I know that snow is white"), knowledge by acquaintance is familiarity with a person, place, or thing, typically obtained through perceptual experience (e.g. "I know Sam", "I know the city of Bogotá", or "I know Russell's Problems of Philosophy"). [1]

  9. Conscientiousness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conscientiousness

    Respondents are asked the extent to which they, for example, often forget to put things back in their proper place, or are careful to avoid making mistakes. [10] Some statement-based measures of conscientiousness have similarly acceptable psychometric properties in North American populations to lexical measures, but their generally emic ...