Authored By:: [[P- Rob Haisfield]]
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A primary goal of this research is to uncover a data structure that facilitates synthesis. Synthesis is not always within the academic context. Here we see it in product development:
Let’s say that I’m trying to figure out the onboarding for a tricky app like GuidedTrack. I need to bring together a ton of potentially conflicting information! User interviews, papers I’ve read, stakeholder beliefs, emails… By default, this is difficult to synthesize because there is simply too much to read.
A helpful architecture might enable me figure out what the main questions are, find claims related to those questions, follow the evidence supporting and opposing the claims I identify as interesting, and then rearrange those claims to form a fitting answer.
Then, 2 months later when the onboarding plan is built and it does not perform well in usability tests, I would be able to track down the reasoning that led to the incorrect decision, re-evaluate the pillars with new evidence, and finally update the decision.
In order to facilitate synthesis, the data structure of the discourse graph needs:
For more challenges awaiting synthesizers, see [[R- Knowledge Synthesis- a conceptual model and practical guide]].
We certainly do not have all of the answers to this question yet. It will be an active area of discovery over the coming months as we learn more about [[Q- What workflows and behaviors facilitate synthesis]] and [[Q- What user behaviors are people doing already that imply structure that is not being instantiated into a literal structure]].
For now, we believe a decentralized discourse graph will require support for:
Blocks of information
Inline coding
People
Typed Relationships
Breadcrumbs
The data structure needs to contend with a few big problems:
Some initial beliefs:
Subquestions
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Evidence
The data structure of a graph built to facilitate decentralized knowledge synthesis requires:
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