Because of the rapid development of strategies for promoting wider information use during the "information age", a family of terms – knowledge transfer,
learning,
transfer of learning, and
knowledge sharing – are often used interchangeably or as synonyms. While the concepts of knowledge transfer, learning, and transfer of learning are defined in closely related terms, they are different notions. According to conventional usage in
psychology, Transfer of Learning occurs in people when they apply already learned information, strategies, and skills to a new situation or context. Another concept of learning is attributed to all animals and even certain plants. Learning in humans starts before birth. According to
cognitive psychology, learning begins from unaware and, even before birth during pregnancy, from non-perceptual processes of distinguishing sensory stimuli. In contrast to both above, knowledge transfer is a process in humans that requires
intention from both sides: to share facts or skills from one side and acquire new knowledge from another (see the definition of knowledge transfer). The most significant difficulties exist with separating the terms knowledge transfer and
knowledge sharing. According to Paulin and Suneson (2012), their distinction is based on different representations of the relationship between knowledge and its context by different authors. Scientists who use the term knowledge transfer intend knowledge as an object without regard to the context; they amplify the enablers, suppress disabling conditions, and overcome obstacles, including the barriers, if they want to create good conditions for knowledge flow. Knowledge sharing refers to a linear (unidirectional) process using a personalization strategy. In contrast, sharing refers to "having or using something simultaneously as someone else" without targeting. The brief overview of related fields of knowledge introduces the main concepts that scholars consider when studying the current topic. In
cognitive anthropology, scholars tend to study patterns of shared knowledge. Cognitive anthropology is concerned with what people from different groups know and how that implicit knowledge changes how people perceive and relate to the world around them. This discipline attempts to understand the impact of culture on developing the cognitive schema – a culturally specific mental structure responsible for an active organization of past experiences, implying activation of the whole. Cognitive anthropologists strive to identify and systematize certain essential aspects of culture to understand how these peculiarities affect knowledge transfer. Because the cognitive schemas on the same issue may differ in different cultures, the particularities of knowledge transfer in different environments are essential. In psychology, knowledge transfer is also based on the notion of cognitive schema and involves essential processes of Assimilation and Accommodation. Assimilation refers to an interpretation of new information within the framework of existing cognitive schema. It is the reuse of existing schemata to fit the new information. Communication studies recognize two main categories of models for describing knowledge transfer. The linear direction category presents a unidirectional process in which messages flow from the communicator to the audience. The subject has been taken up under the title of knowledge management since the 1990s. The term has also been applied to the transfer of knowledge at the international level. In
business, knowledge transfer now has become a common topic in
mergers and acquisitions. It focuses on transferring technological platforms, market experience, managerial expertise, corporate culture, and other
intellectual capital that can improve the companies' competence. Since technical skills and knowledge are very important assets for firms' competence in the global competition, unsuccessful knowledge transfer can have a negative impact on corporations and lead to expensive and time-consuming M&A not creating values to the firms. == History ==