Systems Engineering and Knowledge Management, 2nd Edition

A special issue of Information (ISSN 2078-2489). This special issue belongs to the section "Information Applications".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 31 July 2025 | Viewed by 248

Special Issue Editor


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Guest Editor
Faculty of Informatics and Management, University of Hradec Králové, Rokitanského 62, 50003 Hradec Králové, Czech Republic
Interests: system dynamics; systems engineering; modelling; simulation
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Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

The International Council on Systems Engineering, the leading authority in the realm of Systems Engineering (SE), defines this field of study as a transdisciplinary and integrative approach enabling the realization of the whole life cycle of any engineered system. However, the shift to the transdisciplinary view was based on intradisciplinary and multidisciplinary perspectives on SE. The intradisciplinary point of view is more or less traditional. It is closely associated with the design, development and implementation of information systems. These systems require the cooperation of two stakeholders: a business one (demand) and a technical one (supply). However, this setting can be applied to any domain in which someone needs a technical system and someone is capable of delivering it. Later, a multidisciplinary perspective was shaped. This perspective highlights the necessity of the cooperation of experts from various specialities to develop and deliver required complex systems. The necessity of the coordination, synchronization and orchestration of processes and resources is crucial. The role of a system engineer has transformed a little bit as technical knowledge and expertise have to be complemented by the mastering of soft skills such as leadership, motivation or decision making. Finally, a transdisciplinary point of view stresses that engineering activities, regardless of the domain or the type of system developed, can be generalized and successfully applied during the development of any type of system. In this way, transdisciplinary SE focuses on basic concepts, their relationships, procedures, activities, best practices or fundamental principles. It considers SE as a generic structured development process that proceeds from concept to production and operation.

Similarly, Knowledge Management (KM) can be understood from two perspectives. The first one is based on the technical perspective, in which KM is characterized by research in fields such as expert or knowledge-based systems. This perspective is mainly associated with the intradisciplinary approach to SE as a specific type of computer-based system is designed, developed and implemented. It operates with specific procedural or declarative knowledge in the form of rules, classes with their attributes, ontologies or different types of networks. It is an established technological discipline that embodies the lowest and the most basic level in which proper attention to knowledge is exercised. The second one is tied to soft systems, in which KM is considered an approach to organizations’ improved performance. KM encompasses a knowledge-based and knowledge-orientated organizational management irrespective of organizational mandate or nature. Therefore, KM can be introduced in business organizations, educational institutions or even civil administration. In doing so, prominence to knowledge resources and knowledge processes is highlighted.

This Special Issue intends to publish novel and original works focused on the mutual connection of SE and KM as outlined above. Prospective authors are anticipated to deal with various aspects of SE as an integrative approach, ranging from project management issues and requirements to technical development and coordination of experts during the development of knowledge systems, regardless of the level of their hardness or softness. In this way, an engineered system is considered a system, a technological or organizational one, engineered for work with knowledge in the broad sense of its understanding.

Prof. Dr. Vladimír Bureš
Guest Editor

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Keywords

  • systems engineering methodologies
  • systems engineer
  • knowledge engineering
  • knowledge management process
  • knowledge and expert systems
  • system life cycle
  • systems design and development
  • systems engineering and project management
  • validation and verification processes
  • requirement management
  • modeling and simulation

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