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  • × theme_ss:"Hypertext"
  1. Welsch, L.A.: Multimedia and hypermedia : model and framework (1993) 0.16
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    Abstract
    Compilation of overhead sheets of papers given at the workshop. Describes standards for multimedia and hypermedia
    Footnote
    Part of a special issue featuring papers from the workshop on hypermedia and hypertext standards held in Amsterdam, Netherlands, 22-23 April 1993
    Source
    Information services and use. 13(1993) no.2, S.89-91
  2. Papers from the workshop on hypermedia and hypertext standards held in Amsterdam, Netherlands, 22-23 April 1993 (1993) 0.15
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    Content
    Enthält u.a.: WELSCH, L.A.: Multimedia and hypermedia: model and framework. - BRYAN, M.: Standards for text and hypermedia processing. - POPHAM, M.G.: Use of SGML and HyTime in UK universities. - SCHELLER, A.: The Open Document Architecture (ODA) and its HyperODA extensions. - FROMONT, J.: State-of-the-art regarding the various standards for contents related to text, still images, sound and video. - BROEKMAN, H.J.D.: Effective communication with interactive media
    Source
    Information services and use. 13(1993), S.81-188
  3. Reynolds, C.F.; Robertson, J.: Navigation requirements in large hypertext systems (1993) 0.05
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    Abstract
    Most successful hypertext systems are small. The texts are either authored by a single person or written to tight standards. Examines the problems of handling large amorphous collections of research type documents with hypertext. Presents a pilot study for the Australian Heritage Commission which safeguards heritage sites that may involve conflicts of ownership and land use. An experimental hyperbase was constructed of plants and plant communities in the forest of Tasmania. Examines issues of scaling up, especially those relating to navigation through a vast hyperbase via routes never followed before. Proposes categories for Logical Information Modules and links
  4. Macnee, C.A.: Presenting dynamically expandable hypermedia (1995) 0.04
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    Abstract
    The Multimedia Information Presentation System (MIPS) will allow end users to browse multimedia information presented in a user friendly and consistent manner. In its most powerful configuration, it will allow the end user to formulate queires which are interpreted, analyzed, and dispatched by the system to heterogeneous distributed external data sources, and to view a coherent and customized presentation of the data retrieved as answers. Data are stored in, or referenced from, a set of hyperdocuments conforming to the ISO standards HyTime and SGML. The hyperdocuments constitute an information web which may be dynamically expanded to accomodate retrieved data. The web navigation structure, structure of information nodes, specification of presentation mechanisms, specification of presentation tools, and data are separable and potentially reusable for different applications, different activities within an application, or different environments. Outlines the intended functionality and the design of MIPS, with particular reference to the structure and function of the hypermedia web and the role of the knowledge base system module in its dynamic expansion
    Source
    Information and software technology. 37(1995) no.7, S.339-350
  5. Baião Salgado Silva, G.; Lima, G.Â. Borém de Oliveira: Using topic maps in establishing compatibility of semantically structured hypertext contents (2012) 0.04
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    Abstract
    Considering the characteristics of hypertext systems and problems such as cognitive overload and the disorientation of users, this project studies subject hypertext documents that have undergone conceptual structuring using facets for content representation and improvement of information retrieval during navigation. The main objective was to assess the possibility of the application of topic map technology for automating the compatibilization process of these structures. For this purpose, two dissertations from the UFMG Information Science Post-Graduation Program were adopted as samples. Both dissertations had been duly analyzed and structured on the MHTX (Hypertextual Map) prototype database. The faceted structures of both dissertations, which had been represented in conceptual maps, were then converted into topic maps. It was then possible to use the merge property of the topic maps to promote the semantic interrelationship between the maps and, consequently, between the hypertextual information resources proper. The merge results were then analyzed in the light of theories dealing with the compatibilization of languages developed within the realm of information technology and librarianship from the 1960s on. The main goals accomplished were: (a) the detailed conceptualization of the merge process of the topic maps, considering the possible compatibilization levels and the applicability of this technology in the integration of faceted structures; and (b) the production of a detailed sequence of steps that may be used in the implementation of topic maps based on faceted structures.
    Date
    22. 2.2013 11:39:23
    Source
    Knowledge organization. 39(2012) no.6, S.432-445
  6. Hammwöhner, R.: Hypertext (2004) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Seit dem ersten internationalen Workshop über Hypertextsysteme 1987 in Chapel Hill hat das Hypertext-Gebiet eine außerordentlich dynamische Entwicklung erfahren. Hypertext-Komponenten sind in eine Vielzahl von Informationssystemen und Benutzungsoberflächen integriert, ohne dass sie - wie z.B. bei Dateisystemen - noch als solche wahrgenommen würden. Das World Wide Web (WWW) hat sich als weltumspannendes Medium etabliert, dessen konsistente Weiterentwicklung durch stets erweiterte Standards von einer eigenen Organisation, dem WWW-Consortium gesteuert wird. Elektronische Bücher kann man auf CD-ROM in fast jeder mittelgroßen Buchhandlung kaufen. Große Firmen setzen auf die Weiterbildung ihrer Mitarbeiter durch virtuelle, oft hypertext-basierte Lehre, für die wiederum eigene Standards-z.B. das Shareable Content Object Reference Model (Storm) - entwickelt werden. Dieser weite Einsatzbereich bringt allerdings auch ein erhebliches methodisches Problem mit sich. Hinter den disparaten Anforderungen der jeweiligen Einsatzgebiete droht eine zusammenhängende Theorie von Hypertext zu verschwinden. Ob eine solche überhaupt zu formulieren ist, ist ohnehin fraglich. Schon eine umfassende Theorie von Text konnte bisher nicht oder nur auf sehr abstraktem Niveau formuliert werden. Die im Zusammenhang mit dem Aufbau und der Nutzung von Hypertexten und Hypertextsystemen auftretenden Fragestellungen sind vielfach interdisziplinärer Natur, die z.T. auch einzelwissenschaftlich mit etwas verengter Perspektive untersucht werden. Die Informatik sieht in Hypertext eine Spezialform multimedialer Systeme, die besonders unter dem Gesichtspunkt der Datenverwaltung, bestehender Kommunikationsstandards und Software-Architekturen zu untersuchen sind. Lerntheorien aus Pädagogik und Psychologie sind die Grundlage für den Aufbau und die Nutzung von Lehrhypertexten. Hyperfiction - hypermediale Belletristik- profitiert von und speist sich aus den Strömungen der gegenwärtigen Literaturtheorie. Hier soll Hypertext vor allem unter informationswissenschaftlichen Fragestellungen behandelt werden. Einer kurzen definitorischen Eingrenzung des Gegenstands folgen texttheoretische Überlegungen zum Hypertext. Sodann wird auf die Informationssuche in Hypertexten und die Gestaltung von Hypertexten eingegangen.
    Source
    Grundlagen der praktischen Information und Dokumentation. 5., völlig neu gefaßte Ausgabe. 2 Bde. Hrsg. von R. Kuhlen, Th. Seeger u. D. Strauch. Begründet von Klaus Laisiepen, Ernst Lutterbeck, Karl-Heinrich Meyer-Uhlenried. Bd.1: Handbuch zur Einführung in die Informationswissenschaft und -praxis
  7. Ridi, R.: Hypertext (2018) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Hypertexts are multilinear, granular, interactive, integrable and multimedia documents describable with graph theory and composed of several information units (nodes) interconnected by links that users can freely and indefinitely cover by following a plurality of possible different paths. Hypertexts are particularly widespread in the digital environment, but they existed (and still exist) also in non-digital forms, such as paper encyclopedias and printed academic journals, both consisting of information subunits densely linked between them. This article reviews the definitions, characteristics, components, typologies, history and applications of hypertexts, with particular attention to their theoretical and practical developments from 1945 to present day and to their use for the organization of information and knowledge.
    Series
    Reviews of concepts in knowledge organization
    Source
    Knowledge organization. 45(2018) no.5, S.393-424
  8. Ramarapu, N.: ¬The impact of hypertext versus sequential information presentation on decision making : a conceptual model (1996) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Proposes a conceptual model to examine hypertext information presentation effects on decision making performance when compared with traditional sequentional information presentation and access. Considers which combination of task knowledge type (superficial, and causal) and information presentation styles (sequential, hypertext) yield the best decision making performance. This is achieved by comparing performance effect of hypertext and sequential information presentation when applied to superficial and causal type of knowledge required for the task. The 2 surrogates used for measuring the outcome of the performance effects are decision time and secision accuracy
    Date
    24.10.1996 19:57:22
    Source
    International journal of information management. 16(1996) no.3, S.183-193
  9. Marco, J.G.: Hypertext and indexing languages : common challenges and perspectives (1996) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Conceptual considerations on possible synergies between hypertext and indexing languages' research. The existence of a common conceptual and theoretical background encourages and facilitates cooperation. It is concluded that the conjunction of the almost biological flexibility of the hypertext and the logical and conceptual consistency of indexing languages is a promise of better and more effective information management systems in the future
    Series
    Advances in knowledge organization; vol.5
    Source
    Knowledge organization and change: Proceedings of the Fourth International ISKO Conference, 15-18 July 1996, Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Ed.: R. Green
  10. Lima, G.A.B. de Oliveira: Conceptual modeling of hypertexts : methodological proposal for the management of semantic content in digital libraries (2012) 0.03
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    Abstract
    This research is focused on the continuation of the Hypertext Map prototype implementation - MHTX, proposed by Lima, (2004), with the general objective of transforming the MHTX into a semantic content management product facilitating navigation in context supported by customizable software that is easy to use, through high end desktop/web interfaces that sustain the operation of its functions. Besides, these studies aim, in the long run, to achieve the simplification of the information organization, access and recovery processes in digital libraries, making archive management by authors, content managers and information professionals possible.
    Series
    Advances in knowledge organization; vol.13
    Source
    Categories, contexts and relations in knowledge organization: Proceedings of the Twelfth International ISKO Conference 6-9 August 2012, Mysore, India. Eds.: Neelameghan, A. u. K.S. Raghavan
  11. Tergan, S.-O.: Zum Aufbau von Wissensstrukturen mit Texten und Hypertexten (1993) 0.03
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    Source
    Nachrichten für Dokumentation. 44(1993) H.1, S.15-22
    Theme
    Information
  12. Griffith, C.: What's all the hype about hypertext? (1989) 0.03
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    Source
    Information today. 6(1989) no.4, S.22-24
  13. Dimitroff, A.; Wolfram, D.: Searcher response in a hypertext-based bibliographic information retrieval system (1995) 0.03
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    Abstract
    This article examines searcher behavior and affective response to a hypertext-based bibliographic information retrieval system called HyperLynx for searchers with different search skills and backgrounds. Search times and number of nodes visited were recorded for five specified search queries, and views of the system were recorded for each searcher. No significant differences were found in search times or user satisfaction with the system, indicating that a hypertext-based approach to bibliographic retrieval could be appropriate for a variety of searcher experience levels
    Source
    Journal of the American Society for Information Science. 46(1995) no.1, S.22-29
  14. Spertus, E.: ParaSite : mining structural information on the Web (1997) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Discusses the varieties of link information on the WWW, how the Web differs from conventional hypertext, and how the links can be exploited to build useful applications. Specific applications presented as part of the ParaSite system find individuals' homepages, new locations of moved pages and unindexed information
    Date
    1. 8.1996 22:08:06
  15. Krajewski, M.: Paper machines : about cards & catalogs, 1548-1929 (2011) 0.02
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    Abstract
    "Krajewski draws on recent German media theory and on a rich array of European and American sources in this thought-provoking account of the index card as a tool of information management. In investigating the road from the slips of paper of the 16th century to the data processing of the 20th, Krajewski highlights its twists and turns--failures and unintended consequences, reinventions, and surprising transfers."--Ann M. Blair, Henry Charles Lea Professor of History, Harvard University, and author of Too Much to Know: Managing Scholarly Information before the Modern Age -- Ann Blair "This is a fascinating, original, continuously surprising, and meticulously researched study of the long history of the emergence of card systems for organizing not only libraries but business activities in Europe and the United States. It is particularly important for English language readers due to its European perspective and the extraordinary range of German and other resources on which it draws." --W. Boyd Rayward, Professor Emeritus, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign -- W. Boyd Rayward "Markus Krajewski has done the history of cataloguing and the history of information management a considerable service: I recommend it highly." -- Professor Tom Wilson, Editor-in-Chief, Information Research
    LCSH
    Information organization / History
    Series
    History and foundations of information science
    Subject
    Information organization / History
  16. Oliveira Lima, G.A.B. de: Hypertext model - HTXM : a model for hypertext organization of documents (2008) 0.02
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    Content
    This article reports an applied research on the construction and implementation of a semantically structured conceptual prototype to help in the organization and representation of human knowledge in hypertextual systems, based on four references: the Facet Analysis Theory (FAT), the Conceptual Map Theory, semantic structure of hypertext links and the technical guidelines of the Associacao Brasileira de Normas Técnicas (ABNT). This prototype, called Modelo Hipertextual para Organizacao de Documentos (MHTX) - Model For Hypertext Organization of Documents HTXM - is formed by a semantic structure called Conceptual Map (CM) and Expanded Summary (ES), the latter based on the summary of a selected doctoral thesis to which access points were designed. In the future, this prototype maybe used to implement a digital libraty called BTDECI - UFMG (Biblioteca de Teses e Dissertacöes do Programa de Pós-Graduacao da Escola de Ciência da Informacao da UFMG - Library of Theses and Dissertations of the Graduate Program of School of Information Science of Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais).
    Series
    Advances in knowledge organization; vol.11
    Source
    Culture and identity in knowledge organization: Proceedings of the Tenth International ISKO Conference 5-8 August 2008, Montreal, Canada. Ed. by Clément Arsenault and Joseph T. Tennis
  17. Baoming, Z.: Authoring a hypertext database : experiences with HyperPAD (1993) 0.02
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    Abstract
    In a hypertext database, the information is presented as a network of nodes connected by links. Such nodes may be text, graphics, audio, video, and even other software. Although hypertext provides a new approach to information management, it also leaves a whole new set of problems for the designers of the hypertext database to solve. As the volume of information grows, the task of authoring a hypertext database becomes much more complex. In this article, the author presents the experiences during the development of a hypertext version of the user's guide for information services on JANET, in the UK, by using HyperPAD, a hypertext shell for the IBM PC. It may be the first step to explore the proper way to solve those problems which come together with the increasing application of hypertext
    Source
    Aslib proceedings. 45(1993) no.1, S.19-22
  18. Nauta, G.J.: HYPERICONICS: Hypertext and the social construction of information about the history of artistic notions (1993) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Some 25 years ago the Leiden art historian Van de Waal, inventor of ICONCLASS, developed an 'icon knowledge system' called Beeldleer. After a brief review of this system the author does borrow some central ideas of Beeldleer to discuss a method of studying historically the elementary means of artistic expression with the use of hypertext concepts. The potential of a social construction of information in this field is being emphasized. Finally the design of a pilot study in an educational context will be discussed
    Source
    Knowledge organization. 20(1993) no.1, S.35-46
  19. Chen, C.; Rada, R.: Interacting with hypertext : a meta-analysis of experimental studies (1996) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Presents a study on hypertext examining the cognitive styles and spatial ability of users; the complexity of tasks; and the strucutre of information organization and the visualization of the structure. Future work on hypertext usability should emphasize task taxonomies along with longitudinal and ethnographic studies for a deep understanding of the interactions between users and hypertext
    Theme
    Information
  20. Smith, L.C.: "Wholly new forms of encyclopedias" : electronic knowledge in the form of hypertext (1989) 0.02
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    Date
    7. 1.1996 22:47:52
    Source
    Information, knowledge, evolution. Proceedings of the 44th FID Congress, Helsinki, 28.8.-1.9.1988. Ed. by S. Koshiala and R. Launo
    Theme
    Information

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