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Knowledge Acquisition, Volume 1
Volume 1, Number 1, 1989
- The Editors:

Editorial. 1-2 - Editorial Board. 2

- John H. Boose:

A survey of knowledge acquisition techniques and tools. 3-37 - Brian R. Gaines:

Social and cognitive processes in knowledge acquisition. 39-58 - Mary A. Meyer, Susan M. Mniszewski, Alfred T. Peaslee:

Using three minimally biasing elicitation techniques for knowledge acquisition. 59-71 - Mark A. Musen

:
Conceptual models of interactive knowledge acquisition tools. 73-88 - Brian M. Slator:

Extracting lexical knowledge from dictionary text. 89-112 - Masaki Suwa, Hiroshi Motoda:

Acquisition of associative knowledge by the frustration-based learning method in an auxiliary-line problem. 113-137
Volume 1, Number 2, 1989
- Jon Sticklen, B. Chandrasekaran, William E. Bond:

Distributed causal reasoning. 139-162 - Marc Linster:

Towards a second generation knowledge acquisition tool. 163-183 - John H. Boose, David B. Shema, Jeffrey M. Bradshaw

:
Recent progress in AQUINAS: A knowledge acquisition workbench. 185-214 - Izak Benbasat, Jasbir Singh Dhaliwal:

A framework for the validation of knowledge acquisition. 215-233
Volume 1, Number 3, 1989
- Michael J. Freiling, Chris Jacobson:

A new look at inference engine synthesis. 235-254 - Thomas R. Gruber:

A method for acquiring strategic knowledge. 255-277 - Sandra Marcus:

Understanding decision ordering from a piecemeal collection of knowledge. 279-298 - Georg Klinker, Casey Boyd, David Dong, Jon Maiman, John P. McDermott, Robert Schnelbach:

Building expert systems with KNACK. 299-320
Volume 1, Number 4, 1989
- William P. Birmingham, Daniel P. Siewiorek

:
Automated knowledge acquisition for a computer hardware systhesis system. 321-340 - Mildred L. G. Shaw, Brian R. Gaines:

Comparing conceptual structures: consensus, conflict, correspondence and contrast. 341-363 - Ken'ichi Handa, Shun Ishizaki:

Learning importance of concepts: construction of representative network. 365-378 - Kalev Ruberg, Steven M. Cornick, Kay A. James:

House calls: building and maintaining a rule-base. 379-401

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