
Human Capital and Assets in the Networked World
Description
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Featuring contributions from leading scholars in the field, the book discusses human capital and human assets from a connectionist perspective, focusing on the growing infusion of the traditional human capital and social and knowledge-based systems. It goes beyond the current literature by providing a platform for a broad scope of discussion regarding human capital and assets, and more importantly, by encouraging a multidisciplinary fusion between diverse academic disciplines. Multi-level and multi-discipline chapters are represented, as well as when appropriate, plurality of empirical methods from diverse disciplines that are enhancing the opportunity for the building of a holistic theory of human capital and assets in the new networked society. The book also broadens the human capital praxis framework introduced and used by Russ, into the new networked society focusing on definitions, management, value creation, valuation and reporting of human capital and assets.
Human Capital and Assets in the Networked World provides researchers and students in all disciplines of management with a wide-ranging reference and will provide new insights of developing and managing talent in the the new networked economy that could be applied by advanced practitioners to augment company success.
Reviews / Votes
This volume contains 11 essays by business and other researchers from North America, Australia, Israel, Europe, and India, who explore the impact of new technologies on the intersection of human and social capital and assets. They emphasize human capital an assets from a connectionist perspective that focuses on the infusion of the traditional human capital and social and knowledge-based systems, extending discussion of the interaction between types of capital among different actors over different time frames and addressing how it changes based on the application of new networked technologies. They examine epistemological perspectives in the analysis of human capital and assets and the development of the knowledge-based economy; knowledge transfer and value creation in meat producing firms in different countries; the impact bias in how researchers scan their environment, and the role of big data and artificial intelligence; adaptations of individuals to fast-changing environments; sharing tacit knowledge in intra-firm teams; and how knowledge sharing and envisioning processes can have positive effects on human and social capital growth. Others address challenges of the financial industry from the perspective of human and social capital, a new model of collaboration that integrates technology in the Canadian health care system, the literature on examples of human-derived capital, the challenge of measuring human capital, and the impact of CEOs' cognitive biases and perception from external financial constraints on innovative small and medium-sized enterprises' growth opportunities. -- Annotation (c)2017 * (protoview.com) *More details
Person
Content
Chapter 2. "Knowledge transfer networks, value creation and cultural aspects in industrial production"; Knut Ingar Westeren
Chapter 3. "Emerging technologies for data research; implications for bias, curation and reproducible results"; Daniel Worden
Chapter 4. "Thrive Transitional Experiences: Self-knowledge, Improvisation and Transformation Quotient in a highly dynamic networked world"; Victoria Choi Yue Woo, Richard J. Boland Jr., and David L. Cooperrider
Chapter 5. "Teams' tacit knowledge in the networked world"; Michael Cohen and Sukanto Bhattacharya
Chapter 6. "Integrating values, purposes and visions for responsible development"; Federico Niccolini, Elizabeth B. Davis, Monia La Verghetta, and Valentina Pilotti
Chapter 7. "Human capital gone into the dark side: XXI century's financial centres: Is FinTech a solution?"; Mikel Larreina and Leire Gartzia
Chapter 8. "Transforming Shoulder Care with Innovative Networks and Shared-Care Accountability Models"; Farah Nabi, Stephen Gallay, Erik Hellsten, Joel Lobo and Jesse Slade Shantz
Chapter 9. "Human-derived capital: The search for "Yeti" or an evidence-based approach?"; Carolyn M. Youssef-Morgan, Paul P. Poppler, Ernie Stark and Greg Ashley
Chapter 10. "Human capital: The mathematics of measurement!"; Krishna Priya Rolla
Chapter 11. "Under-Investments in Innovative SMEs: The Effect of Entrepreneurial Cognitive Bias"; Raphael Bar-El, Ilanit Gavious, Dan Kaufmann, Dafna Schwartz
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