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An analysis of the structure of expert knowledge
Journal article

An analysis of the structure of expert knowledge

Abstract

An important criterion affecting the success of an expert system is the quality of the underlying heuristics elicited from an expert. It is believed possible though, to use factors such as formal education, experience, and cognitive functioning to define the level of competence of experts when they perform in a specific domain. Thus, five hypotheses were postulated and tested by means of an empirical study of 17 security analysts in an attempt to study the relationship existing between these factors. It was f ound that the number of deviation-amplifying feedback cycles in the subjects' cause maps correlated with the degree of their security price forecasting accuracy. However, no significant correlation between accuracy of forecasting and the subjects' education, experience, or cognitive complexity was found. In view of lack of an indicator for the choice of an expert with superior performance, application of dialectical inquiry is proposed to assist the knowledge engineer in improving the validity of the underlying knowledge base of the expert systems under consideration.

Authors

Montazemi AR; Chan L

Journal

European Journal of Operational Research, Vol. 45, No. 2-3, pp. 275–292

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

April 13, 1990

DOI

10.1016/0377-2217(90)90193-f

ISSN

0377-2217

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