| license | Apache-2.0 |
| name | tacit-expertise-elicitation |
| description | Techniques for surfacing implicit, hard-to-articulate knowledge that experts use in practice |
| category | Cognitive Science & Decision Making |
| tags | ["tacit-knowledge","expertise","elicitation","methodology","transfer"] |
SKILL.md: Tacit Expertise Elicitation
Decision Points
Method Selection Decision Tree
Need to elicit expert knowledge?
├── Expert can articulate their process clearly
│ ├── YES → Suspect rehearsed account
│ │ └── Use situational re-evocation with specific difficult case
│ └── NO → Says "I just know" or "it's intuition"
│ └── Use MELI protocol with four-pass structure
│
├── Time/resource constraints?
│ ├── Single expert, 2-3 hours → MELI interview
│ ├── Multiple experts, short timeline → Cognitive shadowing
│ ├── Cross-cultural context → Community workshop (elicitive approach)
│ └── Long-term institutional knowledge → Cognitive task analysis
│
├── Knowledge transfer context?
│ ├── Within same domain/culture → Direct MELI
│ ├── Cross-domain transfer → Elicitive methodology first
│ ├── Retiring expert → Community-embedded MELI
│ └── Failed previous attempts → Diagnose structural barriers
│
└── Community dynamics?
├── Competitive/political tensions → Use community setting
├── High trust environment → Individual or small group
└── Learning resistance → Focus on specific past moments
Interview Moment Decision Points
During elicitation session:
├── Expert gives smooth narrative → "Let's go back to that specific moment..."
├── Expert says "usually I..." → "In this particular case, what did you do?"
├── Expert rationalizes decision → "What did you notice first?"
├── Expert claims "best practice" → "What made you deviate from that?"
└── Expert shows uncertainty → "That uncertainty - what was driving it?"
Failure Modes
1. The Rehearsed Account Trap
Detection: Expert provides smooth, logical narrative with clear problem→analysis→solution arc
Symptoms: No hesitation, no uncertainty mentioned, perfect hindsight clarity
Fix: Interrupt with "Let's pause at that moment when you first noticed X. What exactly did you see?"
2. Real-Time Verbalization Error
Detection: You're asking experts to explain their thinking while performing
Symptoms: Stilted performance, rationalized explanations, changed decision patterns
Fix: Use post-hoc structured retrospective with sensory detail reconstruction
3. Credential Conflation
Detection: Selecting interviewees based on titles, certifications, or years of experience
Symptoms: Knowledge that doesn't transfer, generic advice, inability to handle edge cases
Fix: Look for evidence of deliberate practice and demonstrated adaptive expertise
4. Context Stripping
Detection: Extracting "universal principles" that should work everywhere
Symptoms: Knowledge fails when applied in different contexts, local experts feel devalued
Fix: Embed elicitation within target community, surface local knowledge first
5. Competitive Contamination
Detection: Formal CPD/learning settings producing curated success stories only
Symptoms: Repeated organizational failures, knowledge hoarding, surface-level sharing
Fix: Create psychologically safe structured protocols that make curation difficult
Worked Examples
Example 1: Senior Mediator Knowledge Capture
Setup: Law firm's top mediator retiring, needs to transfer 20 years of expertise to junior staff.
Novice approach would be: "Tell us your best practices" → Gets rehearsed principles about "active listening" and "finding common ground"
Expert elicitation process:
- Identify specific difficult case from mediator's recent memory
- First pass - situational reconstruction: "It's Tuesday morning, you walk into the conference room. What do you see? What's the energy in the room?"
- Expert reveals: "The plaintiff's lawyer had his arms crossed, sitting back. I knew immediately this wasn't going to be a numbers negotiation"
- Second pass - decision moments: "What made you decide to separate the parties right then instead of starting together?"
- Expert reveals tacit pattern: "When I see that body language combo - crossed arms plus the particular way he was positioned relative to his client - it means he's performing for his client, not negotiating. Direct discussion would just entrench positions."
- Third pass - constraints/alternatives: "What else could you have done? What stopped you?"
- Fourth pass - transfer: Junior mediators practice recognizing this pattern in role-play
Key insight captured: Expert wasn't following "separate parties when tensions are high" - they were reading micro-signals of performative vs. genuine negotiation stance.
Example 2: Failed Knowledge Transfer Recovery
Setup: Manufacturing company's quality control training keeps failing - new inspectors miss defects that experienced ones catch easily.
Previous failed approach: Experienced inspectors created checklist of "what to look for" → New inspectors followed checklist but still missed critical issues
Elicitation process:
- Community workshop setting - 3 expert inspectors, 2 trainees, facilitator
- Specific case focus: Recent near-miss where trainee passed defective part
- Reconstruct the moment: "You're looking at the part. Walk me through the first 10 seconds."
- Expert reveals: "I don't actually go through the checklist sequentially. I scan for overall 'wrongness' first - something about the surface texture didn't look right"
- Probe deeper: "What does 'wrongness' look like? What are your eyes doing?"
- Tacit knowledge surfaced: Expert's scanning pattern follows stress lines in the material, accumulated over years of seeing failures
- Transfer method: Create exercises where trainees practice pattern recognition on progressively subtle examples
Outcome: Training redesigned around pattern recognition rather than sequential checking.
Example 3: Cross-Cultural Expertise Transfer
Setup: International development organization wants to apply successful conflict resolution methods from Northern Ireland to post-conflict Africa.
Standard approach would be: Export the Northern Ireland framework directly → Predictable failure due to context mismatch
Elicitive approach:
- Start with local expertise: Identify respected local practitioners who've successfully managed similar conflicts
- MELI with local experts first: What are they actually doing? What constraints do they navigate?
- Surface local knowledge: Community-embedded practices around reconciliation, authority structures, timing
- Find bridge points: Where Northern Ireland experience resonates with local patterns
- Hybrid development: Create methods that honor local knowledge while incorporating relevant external insights
Key principle: Local expertise gets elevated to equal status with imported expertise.
Quality Gates
Knowledge elicitation session is complete when:
NOT-FOR Boundaries
This skill should NOT be used for:
General interviewing → Use standard interview techniques instead
Performance evaluation → For assessment of individual performance, use performance management frameworks instead
Academic research → For theoretical knowledge generation, use research methodology instead
Crisis decision support → For real-time expert assistance, use decision support systems instead
Mediation practice itself → For conducting actual mediations, use conflict resolution skills instead
Organizational change management → For systemic organizational change, use change management frameworks instead
When expert knowledge is already well-documented → For codified knowledge transfer, use training design instead
When context cannot be preserved → For knowledge that must work across radically different contexts, use abstraction and generalization methods instead
This skill specifically targets the gap between what experts can say they do and what they actually do in practice - the tacit, context-dependent knowledge that resists explicit articulation but is essential for competent performance.