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  • × theme_ss:"Elektronisches Publizieren"
  1. Lawrence, S.: Online or Invisible? (2001) 0.06
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    Content
    The volume of scientific literature typically far exceeds the ability of scientists to identify and utilize all relevant information in their research. Improvements to the accessibility of scientific literature, allowing scientists to locate more relevant research within a given time, have the potential to dramatically improve communication and progress in science. With the web, scientists now have very convenient access to an increasing amount of literature that previously required trips to the library, inter-library loan delays, or substantial effort in locating the source. Evidence shows that usage increases when access is more convenient, and maximizing the usage of the scientific record benefits all of society. Although availability varies greatly by discipline, over a million research articles are freely available on the web. Some journals and conferences provide free access online, others allow authors to post articles on the web, and others allow authors to purchase the right to post their articles on the web. In this article we investigate the impact of free online availability by analyzing citation rates. We do not discuss methods of creating free online availability, such as time-delayed release or publication/membership/conference charges. Online availability of an article may not be expected to greatly improve access and impact by itself. For example, efficient means of locating articles via web search engines or specialized search services is required, and a substantial percentage of the literature needs to be indexed by these search services before it is worthwhile for many scientists to use them. Computer science is a forerunner in web availability -- a substantial percentage of the literature is online and available through search engines such as Google (google.com), or specialized services such as ResearchIndex (researchindex.org). Even so, the greatest impact of the online availability of computer science literature is likely yet to come, because comprehensive search services and more powerful search methods have only become available recently. We analyzed 119,924 conference articles in computer science and related disciplines, obtained from DBLP (dblp.uni-trier.de). In computer science, conference articles are typically formal publications and are often more prestigious than journal articles, with acceptance rates at some conferences below 10%. Citation counts and online availability were estimated using ResearchIndex. The analysis excludes self-citations, where a citation is considered to be a self-citation if one or more of the citing and cited authors match.
  2. Brusilovsky, P.; Eklund, J.; Schwarz, E.: Web-based education for all : a tool for development adaptive courseware (1998) 0.05
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    Abstract
    Describes an approach for developing adaptive textbooks and presents InterBook - an authoring tool based on this approach which simplifies the development of adaptive electronic textbooks on the Web
    Date
    1. 8.1996 22:08:06
    Footnote
    Contribution to a special issue devoted to the Proceedings of the 7th International World Wide Web Conference, held 14-18 April 1998, Brisbane, Australia
  3. Somers, J.: Torching the modern-day library of Alexandria : somewhere at Google there is a database containing 25 million books and nobody is allowed to read them. (2017) 0.05
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    Abstract
    You were going to get one-click access to the full text of nearly every book that's ever been published. Books still in print you'd have to pay for, but everything else-a collection slated to grow larger than the holdings at the Library of Congress, Harvard, the University of Michigan, at any of the great national libraries of Europe-would have been available for free at terminals that were going to be placed in every local library that wanted one. At the terminal you were going to be able to search tens of millions of books and read every page of any book you found. You'd be able to highlight passages and make annotations and share them; for the first time, you'd be able to pinpoint an idea somewhere inside the vastness of the printed record, and send somebody straight to it with a link. Books would become as instantly available, searchable, copy-pasteable-as alive in the digital world-as web pages. It was to be the realization of a long-held dream. "The universal library has been talked about for millennia," Richard Ovenden, the head of Oxford's Bodleian Libraries, has said. "It was possible to think in the Renaissance that you might be able to amass the whole of published knowledge in a single room or a single institution." In the spring of 2011, it seemed we'd amassed it in a terminal small enough to fit on a desk. "This is a watershed event and can serve as a catalyst for the reinvention of education, research, and intellectual life," one eager observer wrote at the time. On March 22 of that year, however, the legal agreement that would have unlocked a century's worth of books and peppered the country with access terminals to a universal library was rejected under Rule 23(e)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure by the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. When the library at Alexandria burned it was said to be an "international catastrophe." When the most significant humanities project of our time was dismantled in court, the scholars, archivists, and librarians who'd had a hand in its undoing breathed a sigh of relief, for they believed, at the time, that they had narrowly averted disaster.
  4. Nguyen, T.-L.; Wu, X.; Sajeev, S.: Object-oriented modeling of multimedia documents (1998) 0.04
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    Abstract
    Describes an object-oriented model for paper-based multimedia documents such as textbook with embedded graphics. This model is the 1st step towards building a manageable authoring system for the Web, in which documents can be easily built, extended, truncated, reordered, assembled and disassembled on a computer basis, and the document components, can be reused. The model will also make accessible properties, which might be significant or important to the user, especially in searching or classifying documents, such as the document title and author. Explains the model design and presents the class hierarchy for the model
    Date
    1. 8.1996 22:08:06
    Footnote
    Contribution to a special issue devoted to the Proceedings of the 7th International World Wide Web Conference, held 14-18 April 1998, Brisbane, Australia
  5. Tenopir, C.: Electronic publishing : research issues for academic librarians and users (2003) 0.04
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    Abstract
    Increased reliance on electronic resources requires examination of the roles of librarians in several key ways. This paper addresses the need for further research into three important areas of electronic publishing. How is the change to digital information sources affecting the scholarly work of college and university students? Previous research shows that students rely on Web and online resources and ask for less help from librarians. We do not know, however, how these changes will affect the learning and scholarly work of college and university students. Research is also needed to determine how the differences between separate article and full journal databases affect the way research is done. What are the implications for scholarship of decisions being made about what publishers publish and what librarians purchase? Finally, are librarians--as intermediaries to the search process--still necessary in a digital age? Online systems are designed to be used independently but that may not always yield the best results.
  6. Weibel, S.: ¬An architecture for scholarly publishing on the World Wide Web (1995) 0.04
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    Date
    23. 7.1996 10:22:20
  7. Sherman, R.J.: ¬The electronic book (1993) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Describes the Electronic Book (EB) standard developed by the Sony Corporation. It defines compatibility with ISO 9660, the international standard for file structures on CD-ROM. The EB standard defines search methods according to word search, endword search, keyword search, menu search, multi search, graphic search and linking. Provides a summary of EB players covering the Sony DD1-EX, DD8, DD-DR1 and Panasonic KXEBP1. Discusses EB software
  8. Nicholas, D.; Nicholas, P.; Jamali, H.R.; Watkinson, A.: ¬The information seeking behaviour of the users of digital scholarly journals (2006) 0.03
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    Abstract
    The article employs deep log analysis (DLA) techniques, a more sophisticated form of transaction log analysis, to demonstrate what usage data can disclose about information seeking behaviour of virtual scholars - academics, and researchers. DLA works with the raw server log data, not the processed, pre-defined and selective data provided by journal publishers. It can generate types of analysis that are not generally available via proprietary web logging software because the software filters out relevant data and makes unhelpful assumptions about the meaning of the data. DLA also enables usage data to be associated with search/navigational and/or user demographic data, hence the name 'deep'. In this connection the usage of two digital journal libraries, those of EmeraldInsight, and Blackwell Synergy are investigated. The information seeking behaviour of nearly three million users is analyzed in respect to the extent to which they penetrate the site, the number of visits made, as well as the type of items and content they view. The users are broken down by occupation, place of work, type of subscriber ("Big Deal", non-subscriber, etc.), geographical location, type of university (old and new), referrer link used, and number of items viewed in a session.
  9. Anderson, R.; Birbeck, M.; Kay, M.; Livingstone, S.; Loesgen, B.; Martin, D.; Mohr, S.; Ozu, N.; Peat, B.; Pinnock, J.; Stark, P.; Williams, K.: XML professionell : behandelt W3C DOM, SAX, CSS, XSLT, DTDs, XML Schemas, XLink, XPointer, XPath, E-Commerce, BizTalk, B2B, SOAP, WAP, WML (2000) 0.03
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    Abstract
    In diesem Buch sollen die grundlegenden Techniken zur Erstellung, Anwendung und nicht zuletzt Darstellung von XML-Dokumenten erklärt und demonstriert werden. Die wichtigste und vornehmste Aufgabe dieses Buches ist es jedoch, die Grundlagen von XML, wie sie vom World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) festgelegt sind, darzustellen. Das W3C hat nicht nur die Entwicklung von XML initiiert und ist die zuständige Organisation für alle XML-Standards, es werden auch weiterhin XML-Spezifikationen vom W3C entwickelt. Auch wenn immer mehr Vorschläge für neue XML-basierte Techniken aus dem weiteren Umfeld der an XML Interessierten kommen, so spielt doch weiterhin das W3C die zentrale und wichtigste Rolle für die Entwicklung von XML. Der Schwerpunkt dieses Buches liegt darin, zu lernen, wie man XML als tragende Technologie in echten Alltags-Anwendungen verwendet. Wir wollen Ihnen gute Design-Techniken vorstellen und demonstrieren, wie man XML-fähige Anwendungen mit Applikationen für das WWW oder mit Datenbanksystemen verknüpft. Wir wollen die Grenzen und Möglichkeiten von XML ausloten und eine Vorausschau auf einige "nascent"-Technologien werfen. Egal ob Ihre Anforderungen sich mehr an dem Austausch von Daten orientieren oder bei der visuellen Gestaltung liegen, dieses Buch behandelt alle relevanten Techniken. jedes Kapitel enthält ein Anwendungsbeispiel. Da XML eine Plattform-neutrale Technologie ist, werden in den Beispielen eine breite Palette von Sprachen, Parsern und Servern behandelt. Jede der vorgestellten Techniken und Methoden ist auf allen Plattformen und Betriebssystemen relevant. Auf diese Weise erhalten Sie wichtige Einsichten durch diese Beispiele, auch wenn die konkrete Implementierung nicht auf dem von Ihnen bevorzugten System durchgeführt wurde.
    Dieses Buch wendet sich an alle, die Anwendungen auf der Basis von XML entwickeln wollen. Designer von Websites können neue Techniken erlernen, wie sie ihre Sites auf ein neues technisches Niveau heben können. Entwickler komplexerer Software-Systeme und Programmierer können lernen, wie XML in ihr System passt und wie es helfen kann, Anwendungen zu integrieren. XML-Anwendungen sind von ihrer Natur her verteilt und im Allgemeinen Web-orientiert. Dieses Buch behandelt nicht verteilte Systeme oder die Entwicklung von Web-Anwendungen, sie brauchen also keine tieferen Kenntnisse auf diesen Gebieten. Ein allgemeines Verständnis für verteilte Architekturen und Funktionsweisen des Web wird vollauf genügen. Die Beispiele in diesem Buch verwenden eine Reihe von Programmiersprachen und Technologien. Ein wichtiger Bestandteil der Attraktivität von XML ist seine Plattformunabhängigkeit und Neutralität gegenüber Programmiersprachen. Sollten Sie schon Web-Anwendungen entwickelt haben, stehen die Chancen gut, dass Sie einige Beispiele in Ihrer bevorzugten Sprache finden werden. Lassen Sie sich nicht entmutigen, wenn Sie kein Beispiel speziell für Ihr System finden sollten. Tools für die Arbeit mit XML gibt es für Perl, C++, Java, JavaScript und jede COM-fähige Sprache. Der Internet Explorer (ab Version 5.0) hat bereits einige Möglichkeiten zur Verarbeitung von XML-Dokumenten eingebaut. Auch der Mozilla-Browser (der Open-Source-Nachfolger des Netscape Navigators) bekommt ähnliche Fähigkeiten. XML-Tools tauchen auch zunehmend in großen relationalen Datenbanksystemen auf, genau wie auf Web- und Applikations-Servern. Sollte Ihr System nicht in diesem Buch behandelt werden, lernen Sie die Grundlagen und machen Sie sich mit den vorgestellten Techniken aus den Beispielen vertraut.
    Date
    22. 6.2005 15:12:11
  10. Bates, C.: Web programming : building Internet applications (2000) 0.03
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    Abstract
    This book introduces the most important Web technologies and shows how they can be used on today's Websites. From client development using HTML and Javascript, through to full server-side applications written in ASP and Perl, the complete web system is shown. Concentrating on immediately useful code, rather than theory, this is a how-to book Im programmers who need quick answers
    LCSH
    Web site development
    Subject
    Web site development
  11. Walters, W.H.; Linvill, A.C.: Bibliographic index coverage of open-access journals in six subject areas (2011) 0.02
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    Abstract
    We investigate the extent to which open-access (OA) journals and articles in biology, computer science, economics, history, medicine, and psychology are indexed in each of 11 bibliographic databases. We also look for variations in index coverage by journal subject, journal size, publisher type, publisher size, date of first OA issue, region of publication, language of publication, publication fee, and citation impact factor. Two databases, Biological Abstracts and PubMed, provide very good coverage of the OA journal literature, indexing 60 to 63% of all OA articles in their disciplines. Five databases provide moderately good coverage (22-41%), and four provide relatively poor coverage (0-12%). OA articles in biology journals, English-only journals, high-impact journals, and journals that charge publication fees of $1,000 or more are especially likely to be indexed. Conversely, articles from OA publishers in Africa, Asia, or Central/South America are especially unlikely to be indexed. Four of the 11 databases index commercially published articles at a substantially higher rate than articles published by universities, scholarly societies, nonprofit publishers, or governments. Finally, three databases-EBSCO Academic Search Complete, ProQuest Research Library, and Wilson OmniFile-provide less comprehensive coverage of OA articles than of articles in comparable subscription journals.
  12. Siegle, J.: @lles hat ein Ende : Im Sog der kriselnden Web-Wirtschaft kämpfen immer mehr Internet-Zeitschriften um ihr Überleben (2001) 0.02
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    Content
    Inhaltlich soll Net-Business zu einem Branchendienst umgebaut werden, wobei die Schwerpunkte neben Köpfen, Konzepten und Karriere auch im Bereich Medien und Marketing liegen sollen. Online-Unternehmer Turi mochte hierbei mit einem Team von drei bis vier Redakteuren auskommen". Entgegen anderslautenden Medienberichten wird die Online-Ausgabe von NetBusiness nicht eingestellt und zunächst weiterhin von der Milchstraßen-Tochter Tomorrow Internet AG betreut. Turis Service Koepfe.de soll in den Web-Ableger von Net-Business integriert werden. Schon seit Monaten munkelte die Szene über ein nahes Ende des im Januar 2000 gestarteten Net-Business. Die zunächst im Zwei-Wochenrhythmus vertriebene Zeitung hatte ihren Erscheinungszyklus im Herbst 2000 auf einen wöchentlichen verkürzt. Nachdem jedoch die Anzeigenumsätze drastisch eingebrochen waren, war der Verlag Ende vergangenen Jahres energisch zurückgerudert und hatte einen rigiden Sparkurs verordnet: Die Erscheinungsweise wurde wieder auf 14-tägig zurückgestellt, zahlreichen Redakteuren, die nur wenige Monate zuvor von anderen Medien abgeworben wurden, gekündigt. Trotz gegenteiliger Beteuerungen blieben Anzeigenverkauf und Auflagenentwicklung deutlich hinter den Erwartungen zurück - im ersten Quartal 2001 erreichte Net-Business nicht einmal eine verkaufte Auflage von 24 000 Exemplaren. Ursprünglich war ein Vielfaches dessen angepeilt. Madzia spricht dennoch nicht von einem Misserfolg des Projekts: Ich denke nicht, dass die Redaktion oder ich gescheitert sind", sagt der Net-Business-Chefredakteur und -Herausgeber gegenüber der FR. "Das Ganze ist natürlich schon enttäuschend, aber der Markt ist momentan einfach ziemlich rau", so Madzia. Net-Business ist alles andere als ein Einzelfall. Pleiten, Pech und Pannen gehören im deutschen Online-Blätterwald längst zum Alltag. Im Frühjahr war Business 2.0 aus dem Münchner Future-Verlag gescheitert. Ende April hatte die internationale Mutter Future Networks die unrentable deutsche Niederlassung gleich komplett dichtgemacht. Anfang Juli folgte das Aus für E-Business, den Ableger der Wirtschaftswoche. Die Verlagsgruppe Handelsblatt zog nach nur vier Monaten kurzerhand den Stecker und entließ fast 40 völlig überraschte Redakteure.
    Einige hatten erst zwei Tage zuvor ihren Job bei E-Business angetreten. Am Rande dieser Pleiten gibt es noch eine pikante Personalie: Bereits kurz nach dem Start von E-Business war Chefredakteur Gregor Neumann durch Uli Pecher ersetzt worden. Pecher war zuvor Chefredakteur des eingestellten Magazins Business 2.0 - und nach der weiteren Pleite binnen drei Monaten zum zweiten Mal seinen Posten los. Seit Juli erscheint auch eMarket nur noch zweiwöchentlich. Das Fachblatt für E-Commerce und Online-Marketing war Anfang 2000 nur wenige Wochen nach Net-Business als Wochenmagazin an den Start gegangen. Fast dasselbe gilt für die Web-Illustrierte Tomorrow - ebenfalls ein Objekt der Hamburger Milchstraße. Das Magazin erscheint künftig wieder monatlich statt alle zwei Wochen. Im Zuge der Umstellung soll jedem zweiten Tomorrow-Mitarbeiter gekündigt werden. Doch damit nicht genug: In der ersten Juli-Woche stellte auch die Welt ihre Beilage Web-Welt ein. Redaktionsleiter Dirk Nolde und zwei weitere Redakteure wechselten ins Wirtschaftsressort, um dort zwei New-Economy-Seiten zu produzieren. Im Zuge des Online-Booms sind in den vergangenen drei, vier Jahren allein in Deutschland wohl fast ein Dutzend Publikationen entstanden, die den Aufschwung von Firmen wie AOL, Yahoo, eBay oder Intershop dokumentierten. Nun liefert das Web-Wirtschaft jedoch keine Erfolgsstorys mehr. Die Schlagzeilen der New-Economy-Postillen haben sich längst ebenso verdüstert wie die Stimmung in der Branche. Und wer liest schon gern ständig von Massenentlassungen, Pleiten-Start-ups geschweige denn rasant gegen Null tendierenden Aktienkursen?
    "Den E-Business-Titeln fehlt immer mehr die Daseinsberechtigung, denn deren Entwicklung läuft parallel zur Börsenentwicklung", sagt Wolfgang Koser, Chefredakteur der Internet Professionell. Und inzwischen handelt ja kaum noch jemand, daher gibt es auch kein Info-Bedürfnis und damit keine genau definierte Zielgruppe mehr." - Der Methusalern setzt auf Technik - Titel wie eben Internet Professionell haben es da scheinbar einfacher: Sie bedienen eine ganz klar umrissene Klientel. Doch Koser kennt die Probleme der Magazin-Newcomer aus eigener Erfahrung. Sein Heft ist schließlich aus Pl@net entstanden, der ersten deutschen Internet Zeitschrift. Das Netzkultur-Blatt war auf keine genau bestimmbare Leserschaft gemünzt - und ökonomisch gescheitert. PI@net wurde zur technikorientierten Internet Professionell umgebaut, die auf der nächsten CeBit ihren fünften Geburtstag feiert. Wir sind sozusagen der Methusalem unter den Web-Magazinen«, freut sich Koser Was seitdem passiert ist, gleicht einem Blutbad." Die Internet Professionell wächst dagegen beständig weiter. Auch wenn längst nicht mehr so hohe Zuwachsraten wie noch vor zwei Jahren erzielt werden, zählt das Magazin derzeit 25 000 Abonnenten. Etwa noch mal so viele Hefte werden am Kiosk abgesetzt. Von einem Rückgang des Anzeigenvolumens ist jedoch auch die Internet Professionell nicht verschont geblieben. Ahnliches gilt für die Kollegen der Internet World, die inhaltlich auf einen Mix aus Technik-, Reportage- und News-Elemente setzt. Auflagentechnisch boomt das Magazin, anzeigenmäßig mussten gegenüber dem Vorjahr deutliche Abstriche gemacht werden. Mehr als 80000 Exemplare finden jeden Monat einen Käufer. Ab August beliefert die Redaktion nun auch die Nachrichtenagentur ddp täglich mit zehn News aus der Online-Welt. Und im Gegensatz zu anderen Web-Zeitungen baut die Internet World sogar weiter aus: Herausgeber Pit Klein sucht derzeit mindestens zwei Allround-Redakteure. Vielleicht ja ein guter Tipp für geschasste NetBusiness-Kollegen."
    Date
    17. 7.1996 9:33:22
  13. Zhang, Y.: ¬The effect of open access on citation impact : a comparison study based on Web citation analysis (2006) 0.02
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    Abstract
    The academic impact advantage of Open Access (OA) is a prominent topic of debate in the library and publishing communities. Web citations have been proposed as comparable to, even replacements for, bibliographic citations in assessing the academic impact of journals. In our study, we compare Web citations to articles in an OA journal, the Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication (JCMC), and a traditional access journal, New Media & Society (NMS), in the communication discipline. Web citation counts for JCMC are significantly higher than those for NMS. Furthermore, JCMC receives significantly higher Web citations from the formal scholarly publications posted on the Web than NMS does. The types of Web citations for journal articles were also examined. In the Web context, the impact of a journal can be assessed using more than one type of source: citations from scholarly articles, teaching materials and non-authoritative documents. The OA journal has higher percentages of citations from the third type, which suggests that, in addition to the research community, the impact advantage of open access is also detectable among ordinary users participating in Web-based academic communication. Moreover, our study also proves that the OA journal has impact advantage in developing countries. Compared with NMS, JCMC has more Web citations from developing countries.
  14. Interactice magazine combines Web, print and CD-ROM (1996) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Yahoo! Corporation and the Ziff-Davies Publishing Company have announced a strategic relationship that establishes a Web-driven publishing model delivering content through the integrated media of print, online and CD-ROM. The 2 products involved are Yahoo! Internet Life and ZD/Yahoo!
  15. Paul, N.: ¬'The times they are a-changin' : newspapers on the Web (1996) 0.02
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    Issue
    Part two - The Los Angeles Times on the Web
  16. Peek, R.; Pomerantz, J.; Paling, S.: ¬The traditional scholarly journal publishers legitimize the Web (1998) 0.02
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    Abstract
    This article examines the entry of the major academic publishing houses into the WWW publishing. The study identified that during 1997, traditional academic publishers made significant commitments to putting tables of content, abstracts, and the full-text of their print journals on the Web. At the same time, new services and organizations emerged that could ultimately compete with, or eliminate, the need for certain segments of the industry. The authors suggest that these early experiments in Web publishing began unevenly with areas that needed improvement. The article concludes with a discussion about the implications of the traditional academic publisher's presence on the Web
  17. Ramm, F.: Recherchieren und Publizieren im World Wide Web : mit vollständiger HTML-Referenz inkl. Version 3.0 (1995) 0.02
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  18. Brown, D.J.: Access to scientific research : challenges facing communications in STM (2016) 0.02
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    Content
    Inhalt: Chapter 1. Background -- Chapter 2. Definitions -- Chapter 3. Aims, Objectives, and Methodology -- Chapter 4. Setting the Scene -- Chapter 5. Information Society -- Chapter 6. Drivers for Change -- Chapter 7 A Dysfunctional STM Scene? -- Chapter 8. Comments on the Dysfunctionality of STM Publishing -- Chapter 9. The Main Stakeholders -- Chapter 10. Search and Discovery -- Chapter 11. Impact of Google -- Chapter 12. Psychological Issues -- Chapter 13. Users of Research Output -- Chapter 14. Underlying Sociological Developments -- Chapter 15. Social Media and Social Networking -- Chapter 16. Forms of Article Delivery -- Chapter 17. Future Communication Trends -- Chapter 18. Academic Knowledge Workers -- Chapter 19. Unaffiliated Knowledge Workers -- Chapter 20. The Professions -- Chapter 21. Small and Medium Enterprises -- Chapter 22. Citizen Scientists -- Chapter 23. Learned Societies -- Chapter 24. Business Models -- Chapter 25. Open Access -- Chapter 26. Political Initiatives -- Chapter 27. Summary and Conclusions -- Chapter 28. Research Questions Addressed
  19. Zhao, D.: Challenges of scholarly publications on the Web to the evaluation of science : a comparison of author visibility on the Web and in print journals (2005) 0.02
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    Abstract
    This article reveals different patterns of scholarly communication in the XML research field on the Web and in print journals in terms of author visibility, and challenges the common practice of exclusively using the ISI's databases to obtain citation counts as scientific performance indicators. Results from this study demonstrate both the importance and the feasibility of the use of multiple citation data sources in citation analysis studies of scholarly communication, and provide evidence for a developing "two tier" scholarly communication system.
  20. Wieser, C.; Schaffert, S.: ¬Die Zeitung der Zukunft (2009) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Schon lange wird spekuliert, wie wir in Zukunft Zeitung lesen werden. Werden wir am Frühstückstisch wie gewohnt in einer Zeitung aus Papier schmökern oder werden wir die Zeitung als biegsame Folie beschrieben mit elektronischer Tinte in Händen halten? Wird die Zeitung mit anderen Medien wie Radio und Fernsehen verschmelzen? Viele Varianten sind denkbar. Heute lässt sich schon ein Trend ablesen: Immer mehr Leser entdecken die Online-Zeitung als Informationsmedium, eine Voraussetzung für die Nutzung neuer Technologien in der Zeitung der Zukunft. In diesem Kapitel stellen wir Entwicklungsmöglichkeiten der Online-Zeitung dar, wie sie im Social Semantic Web möglich werden.
    Source
    Social Semantic Web: Web 2.0, was nun? Hrsg.: A. Blumauer u. T. Pellegrini

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