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Learning Analytics×Knowledge Space Theory×Knowledge Tracing×
FagområdeUddannelsesanalyseUddannelsesanalyseUddannelsesanalyse
FamilieProcess / pipelineMachine learningMachine learning
Oprindelsesår201119851994
OphavspersonGeorge Siemens & Phil LongJean-Paul Doignon & Jean-Claude FalmagneAlbert Corbett & John Anderson
Typedata-driven educational process pipelineCombinatorial knowledge assessment frameworkProbabilistic student modeling
Oprindelig kildeSiemens, G., & Long, P. (2011). Penetrating the fog: Analytics in learning and education. EDUCAUSE Review, 46(5), 30–40. link ↗Doignon, J.-P., & Falmagne, J.-C. (1985). Spaces for the assessment of knowledge. International Journal of Man-Machine Studies, 23(2), 175–196. DOI ↗Corbett, A. T., & Anderson, J. R. (1994). Knowledge tracing: Modeling the acquisition of procedural knowledge. User Modeling and User-Adapted Interaction, 4(4), 253–278. DOI ↗
AliasserEducational Data Mining, Academic Analytics, Learning Data Analytics, Öğrenme AnalitiğiKST, Knowledge Structures, Competence-Based Knowledge Space Theory, Bilgi Uzayı TeorisiBKT, Bayesian Knowledge Tracing, Deep Knowledge Tracing, Bilgi İzleme
Relaterede333
ResuméLearning Analytics is the measurement, collection, analysis, and reporting of data about learners and their contexts, with the purpose of understanding and optimizing learning and the environments in which it occurs. Formally introduced by George Siemens and Phil Long in 2011, the approach draws on data generated in digital learning environments to provide educators, institutions, and learners with evidence-based feedback for improving educational outcomes.Knowledge Space Theory (KST) is a combinatorial, set-theoretic framework for modeling and assessing human knowledge, introduced by Jean-Paul Doignon and Jean-Claude Falmagne in 1985. It represents a learner's competence as a subset of a problem domain, organizes all feasible competence subsets into a lattice called a knowledge space, and uses probabilistic inference to locate a learner within that space. The approach underlies adaptive testing and intelligent tutoring systems, offering a mathematically rigorous alternative to classical test theory.Knowledge Tracing (KT) is a student-modeling technique that estimates, at each moment in time, the probability that a learner has mastered a target knowledge component. Introduced by Corbett and Anderson in 1994, the classical Bayesian Knowledge Tracing (BKT) model treats skill acquisition as a two-state Hidden Markov Model driven by four interpretable parameters: prior knowledge, learning rate, slip, and guess. Deep variants (DKT, DKVMN, AKT) later replaced HMMs with recurrent and transformer architectures.
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ScholarGateSammenlign metoder: Learning Analytics · Knowledge Space Theory · Knowledge Tracing. Hentet 2026-06-15 fra https://scholargate.app/da/compare