The wisdom hierarchy: representations of the DIKW hierarchy
Rowley, J. (2007). Journal of Information Science. 33(2): 163-180.

This paper revisits the data-information-knowledge-
wisdom
(DIKW) hierarchy by examining the articulation of the hierarchy in a
number of widely read textbooks, and analysing their statements about
the nature of data, information, knowledge, and
wisdom.
The hierarchy referred to variously as the 'Knowledge Hierarchy', the
'Information Hierarchy' and the 'Knowledge Pyramid' is one of the
fundamental, widely recognized and 'taken-for-granted' models in the
information and knowledge literatures. It is often quoted, or used
implicitly, in definitions of data, information and knowledge in the
information management, information systems and knowledge management
literatures, but there has been limited direct discussion of the
hierarchy. After revisiting Ackoff's original articulation of the
hierarchy, definitions of data, information, knowledge and
wisdom
as articulated in recent textbooks in information systems and knowledge
management are reviewed and assessed, in pursuit of a consensus on
definitions and transformation processes. This process brings to the
surface the extent of agreement and dissent in relation to these
definitions, and provides a basis for a discussion as to whether these
articulations present an adequate distinction between data,
information, and knowledge. Typically information is defined in terms
of data, knowledge in terms of information, and
wisdom
in terms of knowledge, but there is less consensus in the description
of the processes that transform elements lower in the hierarchy into
those above them, leading to a lack of definitional clarity. In
addition, there is limited reference to
wisdom in these texts.