• For knowledge work that involves repetitive tasks and identifying patterns, AI can automate these processes and uncover data that may elude human cognition. (trainingindustry.com)
  • By augmenting the analytical capabilities of knowledge workers, AI can expedite decision-making processes, streamline research and significantly enhance problem-solving abilities. (trainingindustry.com)
  • Those who struggle to accept AI into their work processes may face stagnated career growth, raising questions about how to ensure business continuity and mitigate upcoming skills gaps . (trainingindustry.com)
  • Knowledge sharing was simultaneously a free and valuable side effect of processes that were naturally visible. (mcgeesmusings.net)
  • Additionally, the mood in the team ends up tense - the new person may have the impression that colleagues do not take collaboration seriously, start to worry that they withhold the knowledge intentionally or whether the situation reflects a frustrating state of the entire company's work processes. (futurice.com)
  • You chose that phone most likely because you believed that it was made by smarter people using smarter processes, and that the particular smartphone enables you to access knowledge more easily thus making you smarter. (cornerstoneondemand.com)
  • At Power to Innovate 2009 , Boston Scientific's Randy Schiestl (VP of R&D) and Jude Currier (Cardiovascular Knowledge Management & Innovation Practices Lead) described how Boston Scientific is redesigning its innovation processes. (workingknowledge.com)
  • Develop knowledge and innovation processes that find and resolve knowledge gaps or risks early in the innovation process. (workingknowledge.com)
  • They categorize knowledge work into four sequential activities - accessing, generating, embedding, and transferring - and look at the key skills, techniques, and processes of each. (who.int)
  • citation needed] In the organizational context, nuclear knowledge management supports the organization's business processes, and involves applying knowledge management practices. (wikipedia.org)
  • Seno Basuki, HR and compliance manager for PT Citra Abadi Sejati, a member of Busana Apparel Group, has been working with Better Work Indonesia since the beginning of the programme, six years ago. (betterwork.org)
  • The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) launched a nuclear knowledge management programme in 2002. (wikipedia.org)
  • The General Programme is not simply a framework for planning the work of WHO. (who.int)
  • Given the recognition that health is a crucial component of work on development, security, poverty, and justice, among others, the Eleventh General Programme of Work is outward looking, placing health in the increasingly complex global context. (who.int)
  • Harvard Business School Working Paper, No. 24-021, October 2023. (hbs.edu)
  • Wharton faculty members point out, however, that making CRM work involves doing a lot more. (upenn.edu)
  • Knowledge work primarily involves cognitive processing of information to generate value-added outputs. (gatech.edu)
  • But it mostly involves a small group, working on a focused workload, at a reasonable pace. (isixsigma.com)
  • Knowledge work often involves filtering through vast volumes of documents to get to relevant data. (trainingindustry.com)
  • Knowledge work involves manipulating and transmitting ideas, rather than goods. (frontiersin.org)
  • By getting these voices - the voice of the customer, the voice of the business unit, and the voice of regulatory bodies - earlier, the company uncovered its knowledge gaps and risks much sooner. (workingknowledge.com)
  • A rich set of reports and analytics provides insights into article usage, knowledge gaps, opportunities and contributions. (upstreamworks.com)
  • Attention is drawn in particular to identified challenges and gaps, and to the proposed global health agenda and its specific implications for the work of WHO. (who.int)
  • Which means the organization routinely over assigns work. (isixsigma.com)
  • This is true as an individual knowledge worker and as a team or organization. (mcgeesmusings.net)
  • The ability of a company, organization or employee to succeed depends on their ability to acquire new knowledge on a continuous basis and apply that knowledge in an effective way. (cornerstoneondemand.com)
  • We're delighted to announce that the McCabe Centre for Law & Cancer has been awarded a three-year grant from the Australian Government Department of Health to support our work as a designated Knowledge Hub for the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC). (who.int)
  • The funding will support our core Knowledge Hub activities of research and knowledge-sharing, a workshop to share lessons from Australia's defence of tobacco plain packaging in the World Trade Organization, and three regional tobacco control workshops in the Pacific aimed at deepening the legal knowledge, expertise and skills of government lawyers and policymakers to improve health outcomes in the Pacific region. (who.int)
  • Empower your organization with solution flexibility and the capability to migrate other knowledge repositories into one centralized database. (upstreamworks.com)
  • Demonstrate an in-depth understanding of the contexts facing contemporary managers and the relations between strategy, organization, leadership, HRM, and work conditions in professional service firms, high tech companies and public sector organizations. (lu.se)
  • For a KM system to function properly, the people involved must be willing to share and re-use existing knowledge and to cooperatively generate new knowledge to the advantage of the organization. (wikipedia.org)
  • As a knowledge worker, your job, then, is to manage this complex set of tasks to achieve their goals. (gatech.edu)
  • As a knowledge worker, I get paid for what happens inside my head but not until I get the work outside where it can be seen. (mcgeesmusings.net)
  • One way to describe the knowledge worker is in comparison with what might be called a "traditional" profession. (lu.se)
  • How can the knowledge worker be managed considering for instance that he/she might possess more knowledge than the managers themselves? (lu.se)
  • We offer an integrative assessment of this work, highlighting recent psychological investigations that explore the emergence, practice, and implications of colorblindness. (hbs.edu)
  • Hence, we describe a richer conceptualisation of the work-life interface for this group and discuss implications for human resources (HR) policies and management methods in the digital economy. (frontiersin.org)
  • Recognizing this problem and its implications, such as increased employee turnover, many companies are seeking ways to help their employees maintain a healthy balance between work and life. (lu.se)
  • Knowledge management is of particular importance in the nuclear sector, owing to the rapid development and complexity of nuclear technologies and their hazards and security implications. (wikipedia.org)
  • A file directory listing appears pretty thin in terms of useful knowledge content compared to rows of books on shelves. (mcgeesmusings.net)
  • The flexible publishing tools support rich media, including hyperlinks, images and videos to easily improve knowledge content. (upstreamworks.com)
  • You will find information on over 200 books on this website - books that relate to the themes of the site: knowledge, learning, creativity, innovation and personal development. (gurteen.com)
  • Boston Scientific decided to change its innovation process to bring more knowledge and resources into the earlier stages of innovation. (workingknowledge.com)
  • The second part of Boston Scientific's innovation process redesign gave employees access and pointers to relevant information, whether that information resided in a document or in the tacit knowledge of an expert. (workingknowledge.com)
  • To improve upon that, Boston Scientific used Goldfire (innovation software from Invention Machine ) to capture, share and reuse knowledge. (workingknowledge.com)
  • Here's how it works: using innovation software like Invention Machine's Goldfire, companies capture and reuse information and intellectual capital created by employees as well as by external sources . (workingknowledge.com)
  • By combining knowledge from across the innovation ecosystem, the company mapped key clinical knowledge about heart disease and how different heart artery conditions affect the patient outcomes with different stent designs. (workingknowledge.com)
  • Identify, organize, and access information (internal and external) needed by these communities to do their innovation-related work. (workingknowledge.com)
  • Artificial Intelligence and the future of work: What do we know so far? (gc.ca)
  • Factories appreciated the opportunity to get further insights on public reporting and now fully understand how the BWI price structure works and has evolved through time - it is crucial for these key concepts and developments to be clearly understood by factories to ensure their full commitment. (betterwork.org)
  • The students' work is intended to provide valuable insights and suggestions useful for the continued environmental work that is going on in the real world. (lu.se)
  • But the future of work itself makes the identification, management and development of talent ever more primary to the success of companies and organizations. (cornerstoneondemand.com)
  • Representatives of governments, workers' and employers' organizations from many African countries will get together in Ethiopia to explore what works to boost youth employment in the region. (ilo.org)
  • As organizations continue to adapt and evolve to meet the challenges related to globalization and working with new collaboration technologies to bridge time and space, demands on employees' time and attention continue to increase. (lu.se)
  • Written by Aliza Leventhal and Jody Thompson, Preserving Born-Digital Design and Construction Records summarizes key developments and initiatives in this sphere up until the present day and provides useful case studies from organizations collecting and working with these complex records. (dpconline.org)
  • Demonstrate understanding of the practical tensions between managing for both change and continuity in contexts where organizations are increasingly dependent on the strategic management of human resources and knowledge. (lu.se)
  • The objective of the course is to enhance and deepen students' knowledge and understanding of knowledge- intensive firms and organizations, by addressing the theme of knowledge in the economy and in contemporary companies/organizations. (lu.se)
  • In particular, the course focuses on the management of knowledge-intensive organizations. (lu.se)
  • Further the particular characteristics of knowledge-intensive firms and organizations are identified and described. (lu.se)
  • Another main topic of the course is the people working in knowledge-intensive firms/organizations, i.e. the knowledge workers. (lu.se)
  • Given that knowledge-intensive organizations, their employees, and the products/services they produce differ from the prevailing firm, it is of great interest to scrutinize their strategy, management, and marketing. (lu.se)
  • Knowledge-intensive organizations or firms can also be seen as communities of practice formed by occupations producing and reproducing knowledge in that practice. (lu.se)
  • To illustrate and give examples of knowledge-intensive firms/organizations and occupations/professions, examples are provided from studies of, amongst others, consultancy/consultants, R & D/inventors, and hospitals/doctors. (lu.se)
  • Working knowledge : how organizations manage what they know / Thomas H. Davenport, Laurence Prusak. (who.int)
  • This simple definition is consistent with the working definition used in the IAEA document "Knowledge Management for Nuclear Industry Operating Organizations" (2006). (wikipedia.org)
  • Knowledge management systems support nuclear organizations in strengthening and aligning their knowledge. (wikipedia.org)
  • citation needed] States, suppliers, and operating organizations that deploy nuclear technology are responsible for ensuring that the associated nuclear knowledge is maintained and accessible. (wikipedia.org)
  • Nuclear knowledge management issues and priorities are often unique to the particular circumstances of individual Member States and their nuclear industry organizations. (wikipedia.org)
  • Due to the nature of nuclear power plant operating organizations (high hazard but low risk), a number of knowledge management activities and programmes have been in place throughout the industry to manage and control the knowledge and information related to nuclear power plant design, construction, operation and maintenance. (wikipedia.org)
  • In my mind, one of the biggest impacts that the knowledge workers will see is "anticipating context" and "streamlining collaboration/teaming. (capgemini.com)
  • The potential benefits of efficiency and productivity gains for knowledge-intensive firms are clear, and companies in industries such as professional services, health care, and finance are investing billions in adopting the technologies. (gatech.edu)
  • A historical perspective on the emergence of what has been defined as "knowledge-intensive" firms during the past decades is provided. (lu.se)
  • Factors within HRM, such as recruitment, retainment, training, and development, are also discussed, as well as the importance of identity and image to knowledge-intensive firms. (lu.se)
  • Drawing from their work with more than thirty knowledge-rich firms, Davenport and Prusak examine how all types of companies can effectively understand, analyze, measure, and manage their intellectual assets, turning corporate wisdom into market value. (who.int)
  • Analyses focused on sources of knowledge used to inform lesson design, participants' roles and knowledge generated by the teacher community. (researchgate.net)
  • However, it can also lead to new roles for which knowledge workers need to be prepared. (trainingindustry.com)
  • They've made many low-value roles obsolete-sometimes by unintentionally giving them back to high-cost knowledge workers. (mcgeesmusings.net)
  • Role strain theory, which originated from Goode's (1960) scarcity perspective, contends that multiple roles lead to role strain and subsequently interrole conflict (work-family conflict) as it becomes difficult to perform each role due to conflicting demands on time, energy and attention among the roles ( Greenhaus and Beutell, 1985 ). (frontiersin.org)
  • Knowledge Roles and Skills --7. (who.int)
  • But we must grapple with the profound questions it raises about its influence on knowledge workers, professional services and the workforce at large. (trainingindustry.com)
  • The knowledge workforce can evolve to ensure AI is effective, safe and ethical, making it work for them rather than replacing them. (trainingindustry.com)
  • More than 1 million RNs work in hospitals, which makes nursing the largest hospital workforce. (cdc.gov)
  • My research is on health economics and public finance, and my recent work has focused on the pharmaceutical market. (upenn.edu)
  • 3) modify and reorganize scholarship and research on Islam?The goals of the Work Package "Contested Authority and Knowledge Productions" are to study the 'democratisation' of knowledge production, the emergence of new audiences and discursive communities, the delocalisation, subjectivation, and fragmentation of authority, as well as the new forms of community building, online and offline. (giga-hamburg.de)
  • Research in the Work Package will contribute to a better understanding of these developments. (giga-hamburg.de)
  • An economist might question this interpretation, but such misgivings do not detract from the substantive research findings that make this work an invaluable addition to labor history and to the literature on the evolution of intellectual property rights in the United States. (eh.net)
  • Can follow the development of the knowledge management field through journal articles and research oriented books as well as the more popular press. (lu.se)
  • Future research can expand on work to include these factors. (cdc.gov)
  • Six work groups were convened to research and make recommendations on cross-cutting public health and chemical exposure issues. (cdc.gov)
  • This has made it possible to work in a problem-oriented way, applying different methods depending on the specific research question. (lu.se)
  • Aside from the Adams and Reese Baton Rouge office, the New Orleans, Birmingham, Jackson, Memphis, Nashville and Tampa offices have also been recognized among the "Best Places to Work" by publications in their respective communities. (adamsandreese.com)
  • The increase in number of patients with thalassemia living in California highlights the importance of provider knowledge about thalassemia in order to effectively serve these patients in their communities. (cdc.gov)
  • One possible outcome of the discussion will be a set of recommendations that support the design and implementation of public work programmes that positively impact labour market outcomes of youth. (ilo.org)
  • Many companies, he predicts, will fail to make the cultural and organizational changes needed to make CRM work, or will use the resulting data unwisely. (upenn.edu)
  • To create a gemba , we must make the work explicit. (isixsigma.com)
  • Generally, becoming more productive requires us to change our behavior and form new working habits - and this behavioral change becomes more difficult if you want to make the change for a large number of people, the more generations you want to influence and more styles of working culture you face. (capgemini.com)
  • The recommendation properly sets the scope of the regulation to include both published and unpublished works, alike, and does not make separate distinctions based on the age of the work. (publicknowledge.org)
  • and on technology to store and assimilate knowledge and to make it readily accessible in a manner which will allow people to work together even if they are not located together. (wikipedia.org)
  • Do you/Does Name) have flexible work hours that allow (you/him/her) to vary or make changes in the time [(you begin and end)/(he begins and ends)/(she begins and ends)] work? (cdc.gov)
  • List resources to help employers make accommodations for patients returning to work. (cdc.gov)
  • Knowledge about the modes of HIV transmission, clinical features of HIV infection and AIDS, and the HIV antibody test 4. (cdc.gov)
  • That's realistically not going to work, because it compromises clinical efficiency," Grossman Liu said. (medscape.com)
  • First, proliferating information and communication technologies (ICT), often mobile, are connecting people, but also intensifying work beyond traditional offices and working hours ( Ciolfi and Lockley , 2018 ). (frontiersin.org)
  • With groundwork starting in 2017 and service differentiation officially available in Indonesia at the beginning of 2018, Better Work will differentiate factories depending on their level of development and performance. (betterwork.org)
  • Woods says his company's path to purpose is also a work in progress, and not something they necessarily publicize. (hbs.edu)
  • You might also develop more systematic rules of thumb for managing versions of your work products as they evolve. (mcgeesmusings.net)
  • But the benefits for individual knowledge workers can be less clear. (gatech.edu)
  • When technology can do many tasks that only humans could do in the past, what does it mean for knowledge workers? (gatech.edu)
  • Generative AI can and will automate some of the tasks of knowledge workers, but that doesn't necessarily mean it will replace all of them. (gatech.edu)
  • Generative AI can also help knowledge workers find more time to do meaningful work, and improve performance and productivity. (gatech.edu)
  • While it can be worrisome to think about generative AI encroaching on knowledge work, we believe that the benefits can far outweigh the costs for most knowledge workers. (gatech.edu)
  • Visualization allows for the capture of cycle and lead-time data, leading to more predictable knowledge work and more stable knowledge workers. (isixsigma.com)
  • All those priorities are valid but don't forget knowledge workers are drowning in too much information. (capgemini.com)
  • Email is the biggest challenge for the productivity of knowledge workers - could AI be the answer? (capgemini.com)
  • AI has the potential to be a true game changer in support of knowledge workers. (trainingindustry.com)
  • Company talent leaders, including those in learning and development (L&D) and human resources (HR), can implement a variety of training methods and strategies to upskill knowledge workers and help protect them from the impact of AI and automation. (trainingindustry.com)
  • In the last decade, knowledge workers have seen tremendous change in ways of working and living, driven by proliferating mobile communication technologies, the rise of dual-income couples, shifting expectations of ideal motherhood and involved fatherhood, and the rise of flexible working arrangements. (frontiersin.org)
  • Drawing on 54 interviews with Australian knowledge workers in the information technology sector, we argue that the interface between work and life is now blurred and boundaryless for knowledge workers. (frontiersin.org)
  • Knowledge workers take advantage of flexible working to craft unique, personal arrangements to suit their work, family, personal and community pursuits. (frontiersin.org)
  • In particular, knowledge workers use ICT to exchange meaning. (frontiersin.org)
  • but they are subject to the influence of organizational culture, technological support, and supervisory arrangements, as well as the agency of knowledge workers to subvert or comply with organizational norms. (frontiersin.org)
  • Considering rapid technological change, demographic change, societal change and the rise of knowledge work, we propose a new appreciation of the boundaryless work-life interface for flexible knowledge workers. (frontiersin.org)
  • Despite intense work and non-work activities, we contend flexible knowledge workers do not emphasize the distinction between work and non-work. (frontiersin.org)
  • Existing work-life theories do not present the work-life experiences of flexible knowledge workers accurately. (frontiersin.org)
  • Dave comes to conclude that there would be a couple of consequences around the subject of incentivising knowledge workers for sharing their knowledge: if you give people incentives or money for posting knowledge to a KM system then the people who are very good at achieving their targets, they will always find materials to submit to the system to get the rewards. (elsua.net)
  • Such a comparison, in different dimensions, gives additional insight to the distinctiveness of occupations that can be defined as knowledge workers. (lu.se)
  • In 1996, Kahle founded the Internet Archive , which stands alongside Wikipedia as one of the great not-for-profit knowledge-enhancing creations of modern digital technology. (niemanlab.org)
  • The two-day regional event will facilitate exchange of experiences and good practices on what works to boost youth employment through public works programmes. (ilo.org)
  • My colleague Tonianne tells a story where she was working with a group of historians. (isixsigma.com)
  • It has also inspired her to start a masterminds group comprising people who work in the industry to initiate a conversation about possible areas where action is needed to resolve key industry challenges. (hfma.org)
  • Muslims have held varying, sometimes conflicting, views on the extent to which knowledge and authority are exclusive to a single figure or a male 'professional' group, or distributed in society, on how knowledge should be transmitted and controlled, and the literary forms that it should take, and on how it should be reproduced. (giga-hamburg.de)
  • We are keen to see the discussions around open data in education pulled into the wider debates around open education, and therefore, we are setting up an Open Education Working Group . (okfn.org)
  • Sign up to the mailing list and help us begin to think about what this Open Education Working Group needs to do. (okfn.org)
  • Marieke Guy is co-ordinator of the Open Education Working Group. (okfn.org)
  • Can work both individually and as a member of a group with students from different cultures, in order to solve practical problems as well as manage a more extensive project. (lu.se)
  • Draft work group reports, comments that were submitted on them, and final work group reports are available on RESOLVE's Web site . (cdc.gov)
  • Staffing patterns and nurses' working conditions are risk factors for healthcare-associated infections as well as occupational injuries and infections. (cdc.gov)
  • Some can be done alone, while others require working with other people. (gatech.edu)
  • And so, I realized that there's a link between what you do and the people that you work with. (hbs.edu)
  • This is where technology intersects with people and that is why I love working in this field. (capgemini.com)
  • Empowering people at work. (cornerstoneondemand.com)
  • Sub-groups in the remaining 12% of the sample included people driving miscellaneous vehicle types and those working in, on, or near the road. (roadsafe.com)
  • The reasons may be many, yet dozens of national studies compiled over the past 15 years have concluded the same thing that an evening at a city council meeting makes obvious: People know very little about how their government works. (spokesman.com)
  • Eighteen people from across the DPC's membership contributed to the work of the taskforce, which resulted in a Briefing Day ( Unbroken records: A briefing day on Digital Preservation and EDRMS ) and an online booksprint to produce the EDRMS Preservation Toolkit . (dpconline.org)
  • People are the most important component in a KM system and the creation of new knowledge is one of its most valuable byproducts. (wikipedia.org)
  • The Road Safety Knowledge Centre , the forum supported by RoadSafe , where road safety professionals can share their knowledge and expertise, has highlighted an indepth study of work-related road accidents provided by the DFT. (roadsafe.com)
  • The Work Package is part of the Marie Curie Initial Training Network 'Mediating Islam in the Digital Age' (MIDA), coordinated by the 'Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique' (CNRS). (giga-hamburg.de)
  • It explores the negative impact on work-life conflict exacerbated by working across time zones, cultures, and geographical spaces. (lu.se)
  • One line of work explores how different factors contribute to climate vulnerability in small scale farming systems. (lu.se)
  • Fisheries Engineer, whose work focuses on the evaluation of fishery resources utilizing direct evaluation methods, specializing in technical and hydroacoustic, with interest in statistical and inter-relationships topics between the environment and resources. (ifop.cl)
  • Work-life theories can be classified into three streams: (1) negative side of the work-life interface, stemming from role strain theory, (2) positive side of work-life interface, stemming from role accumulation theory, and (3) blurred boundaries between work and non-work, stemming from boundary and border theory. (frontiersin.org)
  • First, to help employees and managers understand ways that generative AI can support knowledge work. (gatech.edu)
  • But realizing the benefits requires taking action now to learn how to leverage generative AI in support of knowledge work. (gatech.edu)
  • Technology has also advanced beyond recognition to support knowledge work but we are yet to see a productivity improvement. (capgemini.com)
  • We provide technical support to generate evidence and new knowledge, and measure the coverage and impact of interventions, and encourage accountability and reforms for safer care. (who.int)
  • Develop the first 5-year plan - Reproductive, Maternal, Neonatal, Child and Adolescent Health Strategy for Somalia 2020-2024 - to ensure the coordinated efforts of partners working to support reproductive, maternal, neonatal, child and adolescent health in Somalia. (who.int)
  • Work Package 4 'Contested Authority and Knowledge Production' deals with the construction and transformation of religious authority and religious knowledge production in changing circumstances. (giga-hamburg.de)
  • Alpert sat down with Knowledge at Wharton to explain her findings in greater detail. (upenn.edu)
  • Other data shows that jobs have become less routine and more cognitive in function, i.e. we have more knowledge-based work. (capgemini.com)
  • The National Safety Council (NSC) released a position statement in 2019 stating that "cannabis impacts psychomotor skills and cognitive ability" and "there is no level of cannabis use that is safe or acceptable for employees who work in safety-sensitive positions" (7). (cdc.gov)
  • The event targets ILO constituents and other relevant stakeholders involved in designing and implementing youth employment or public works programmes or exploring the potential of public works to address youth employment challenges. (ilo.org)
  • Knowledge work is typically dependent on advanced training and specialization in specific domains, gained over time through learning and experience. (gatech.edu)
  • This work generated descriptions of the lifecycle of documents within these domains, a general understanding of the amount of time spent with documents and frequency of document use and descriptions of key interactions with "high value" documents. (surrey.ac.uk)
  • This not only can help save time for businesses but in essence, act as a catalyst for amplifying human potential in knowledge work. (trainingindustry.com)
  • I believe medicine can be shifted, and I have directly worked with nurses and providers that are treating the whole patient and not just the problem occurring at that time. (hfma.org)
  • Finally, companies are offering flexible working arrangements (FWAs), so that employees can vary the time, schedule and location of work, to suit their needs. (frontiersin.org)
  • Rather, they work at any place and time, but also manage to achieve harmonious balance in their lives. (frontiersin.org)
  • The goal here was to reduce the amount of time engineers spend looking for knowledge. (workingknowledge.com)
  • Schiestl said engineers spend 30% of their time looking for relavant knowledge. (workingknowledge.com)
  • LAST WEEK did this person work at any time? (cdc.gov)
  • Upstream Works provides the flexibility to organize and present the knowledge base according to the needs of users, departments and specific business requirements. (upstreamworks.com)
  • Customer Assist is an external-facing knowledge portal that customers can access directly from an organization's website. (upstreamworks.com)
  • Method: Thirty-two participants (16 men and 16 women) underwent isokinetic strength tests and were then divided into two groups: one provided with the knowledge of their strength test results and the other not. (cdc.gov)
  • Registrations primarily included works of low creativity that were likely to be collaborative, such as maps, charts, and dictionaries. (eh.net)
  • Working closely with stakeholders outside academia in a transdisciplinary manner is one aspect of sustainability science that I really appreciate. (lu.se)
  • The objective of this study was to identify some possible trends in the production of academic knowledge about depression and work, especially in the field of Psychology, seeking productions in this area that deal with the depression-work dyad from a psychosocial perspective. (bvsalud.org)
  • This is exactly the main reason why trying to figure out the traditional ROI for Social Software is not going to work really nice and Dave comes to put it quite nicely when he comments further on how can you create a knowledge sharing culture. (elsua.net)
  • Using a panel dataset of 510 academic startups in biomedicine created between 2005 and 2015, we find that, contrary to expectations, startups that rely heavily on their founders' academic work are less likely to be acquired, while we do not observe marked differences with regards to their ability to generate valuable technologies. (hbs.edu)
  • This book examines work-life conflict, i.e., the increasing lack of employees' work-life balance, in the context of virtual teams and distributed work. (lu.se)
  • Like, if you ask for something that you need in the context of genuine need no-one is going to refuse that knowledge exchange. (elsua.net)
  • Applying a difference-in-difference design, we find that founders who build extensively on their academic work as the foundation of their startup experience a decrease in both the number of publications and top publications. (hbs.edu)
  • Understanding and improving nurses' working conditions can potentially decrease the incidence of many infectious diseases. (cdc.gov)
  • Further, it investigates specific causes of work-life conflict in distributed work environments. (lu.se)
  • For researchers and practitioners in the HRM and OB domains, this book adds to the body of knowledge on work-life conflict, with a unique focus on the role of technology. (lu.se)
  • And I worked there for many months, and I just realized how much the employees really appreciated my grandfather and my father. (hbs.edu)
  • While they present a practical approach to cataloging and storing knowledge so that employees can easily leverage it throughout the firm, the authors caution readers about the limits of communications and information technology in managing intellectual capital. (who.int)
  • Knowledge Codification and Coordination -- 5. (who.int)
  • The chapter aims to evaluate the strategic position of social work education to engage in gender-integrated curricular changes. (taylorfrancis.com)
  • Objective: This study investigated whether relative strength between the back and knees can differentiate and predict lifting strategy and the effects of gender, load magnitude, and knowledge of strength on the strategy. (cdc.gov)
  • Authors of a more recent Institute of Medicine report, Keeping Patients Safe, Transforming the Work Environment of Nurses, concluded that nursing is inseparably linked to patient safety and emphasized that poor working conditions for nurses and inadequate nurse staffing levels increase the risk for errors ( 2 ). (cdc.gov)
  • Nearly 3 million registered nurses (RNs) work in the United States. (cdc.gov)
  • Ways of working and living have changed dramatically in post-industrial economies in the last decade. (frontiersin.org)
  • That position is still appropriate for a contemporary global health agenda that reaffirms these principles and adapts them to health work in the coming decade, responding to new questions, new challenges and new forms of responsibility. (who.int)
  • Even though I believe that simply taking a few photos of the work would suffice to help users find the original owner, it hasn't satisfied some. (publicknowledge.org)
  • After many years of working with knowledge work teams in nearly every vertical, I've found that most teams suffer from a combination of blindness and overload. (isixsigma.com)
  • For three years now, the DPC has been working alongside colleagues at the UK Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA) on their digital preservation challenges. (dpconline.org)
  • Better Work began in Cambodia over 20 years ago. (betterwork.org)
  • DSN: CC37.NHIS93.AIDSKNOW 1993 NHIS AIDS Knowledge and Attitudes Public Use Tape In the 1993 NHIS, information on AIDS knowledge and attitudes was collected from one randomly selected adult respondent (18 years and older) from each NHIS family. (cdc.gov)