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  • × theme_ss:"Elektronisches Publizieren"
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  1. Zheng, H.; Aung, H.H.; Erdt, M.; Peng, T.-Q.; Raamkumar, A.S.; Theng, Y.-L.: Social media presence of scholarly journals (2019) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Recently, social media has become a potentially new way for scholarly journals to disseminate and evaluate research outputs. Scholarly journals have started promoting their research articles to a wide range of audiences via social media platforms. This article aims to investigate the social media presence of scholarly journals across disciplines. We extracted journals from Web of Science and searched for the social media presence of these journals on Facebook and Twitter. Relevant metrics and content relating to the journals' social media accounts were also crawled for data analysis. From our results, the social media presence of scholarly journals lies between 7.1% and 14.2% across disciplines; and it has shown a steady increase in the last decade. The popularity of scholarly journals on social media is distinct across disciplines. Further, we investigated whether social media metrics of journals can predict the Journal Impact Factor (JIF). We found that the number of followers and disciplines have significant effects on the JIF. In addition, a word co-occurrence network analysis was also conducted to identify popular topics discussed by scholarly journals on social media platforms. Finally, we highlight challenges and issues faced in this study and discuss future research directions.
  2. Ritchie, I.: New media publishing (1996) 0.01
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  3. Saltzis, K.; Dickinson, R.: Inside the changing newsroom : journalists' responses to media convergence (2008) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Purpose - This article aims to report on research conducted inside British national media organisations. The research was designed to investigate the impact on the working practices of journalists of the process of production convergence - the trend towards news reporting in more than one medium in formerly single-medium organisations. The article describes the changes that are taking place and the ways journalists are reacting to them. Design/methodology/approach - Interviews were conducted with 20 journalists during 2002 and 2003. The interviews were with journalists working in newsrooms at the BBC, Sky News, The Guardian and the Financial Times. Findings - The data show that while multimedia news is becoming well established, the multimedia journalist has been slow to arrive. This is because of the pressures that multi-media working adds to the journalist's daily routine and a concern over the impact on the quality of output. Research limitations/implications - The media environment is evolving rapidly and research findings on this topic quickly go out of date, but the findings presented here offer valuable insights into the news production processes operating in British national media organisations and the ways journalists are adapting to, and are likely to continue to adapt to, changes in production technologies and changed systems of working. Originality/value - The paper is the first to focus on journalistic practice in a converging media environment.
  4. Rao, S.S.: Publishing of electronic databases (1998) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Presents briefly the impact of information technology on information management. Discuses the publication of electronic databases on CD-ROM and the Internet by considering factors such as media of choice, cost factors, basic infrastructure, steps in publishing and their scenario in India, with products. Also, lists the differences between the two technologies. Concludes that India could use these media for publishing its databases not only for its own use but also to earn foreign exchange.
  5. Arnold, K.: Virtual transformation : the evolution of publication media (1995) 0.00
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  6. Jenkins, S.: ¬The death of the written word (1995) 0.00
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    Abstract
    A Times newspaper journalist counters the popular claim that electronic media, ranging from television broadcasting to CD-ROM books and information services over the Internet and WWW, will eventually supplant conventional printed books, periodicals, newspapers and other similar materials
  7. Interactice magazine combines Web, print and CD-ROM (1996) 0.00
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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!
  8. Boeri, R.J.; Hensel, M.: Corporate online/CD-ROM publishing : the desing and tactical issues (1996) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Although existing document imaging software effectively serves small business needs whenit comes to publishing documents from multiple sources in various formats on CD-ROM and the WWW, the same cannot be said when it comes to large scale corporate publishing. Sets out the requirements of corporate in house document publishing, which typically include: avoiding hand crafting documents for different media, having the flexibility not to be hostage to changing word processors, vendor alliances, operating systems, or output media; reducing exception handling as volumes of published documents increase; and incorporating support for upcoming changes in HTML, if WWW publishing is planned. Focuses on the importance of SGML and DTD in this process
  9. Esposito, J.J: ¬The medium, the message and the sceptic (1993) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Looks at the possible impact of electronic media on publishing. Suggests that it is the quality of the informational products and not simply the horsepower of the hardware that is necessary to make consumer electronic publishing a reality. It should not be assumed that the future belongs to the technology companies; the same companies that today lead the book business may well take charge of electronic publishing
  10. Matheson, N.: Scholarly communication in the sciences : publishing trends and the role for libraries: conference report (1993) 0.00
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    Abstract
    The keynote address focused on the crisis in scholarly communication arising from innovations in publishing: Sessions were devoted to: trends in scientific book publishing; journal publishing; the electronic future; document delivery and alternative access; and the use and effects of electronic media for communication and database searching at Imperial College, London
  11. Pack, T.: Electronic magazines : the state of the art (1994) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Today's electronic magazines, published by many companies are available through several different technologies and appeal to both consumers and professional researchers. Advertisers can use electronic magazines to take advantage of cross-media deals and prepare for the coming age of interactivity. A few critics point out that electronic magazines have a long way to go before they reach their potential, but by looking back to the history of magazine publishing a precedent is found that heralds a successful future for electronic publications
  12. Gillham, M.: Home information : what makes a good multimedia CD-ROM? (1995) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Discusses the features of multimedia products and those features which allow interaction, and considers the key differences between home and work use of information CD-ROMs. Sets out the criteria for the evaluation of products that are likely to contribute to the overall evaluation. These include: the information itself; methods of access; output of information; the quality and appropriateness of the media objects presented; interactive features; aesthetics and creativity; and performance, reliability and robustness
  13. Hermans, P.J.: Optimising information services : how businesses and organizations deal with the critical success factors content, reach and information technology (1996) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Although Twinfo BV, Netherlands, is not a publisher, it has for 20 years been occupied with new development in electronic publishing and gained expertise in the field of online information retrieval (terminal emulation and client server), CD-ROMs, interactive television and other interactive media forms via government bodies that in practice are often acting as publishers wanting to open up new markets. Focuses on the concept of multimedia information kiosks
  14. Pack, T.: ¬The electronic editor (1996) 0.00
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    Abstract
    The skills of editors are undervalued by the information industry. Some online media are beginning to follow a television model instead of a newspaper or book model. The danger this trend represents is that more and more information providers will adopt a style over substance strategy and overlook the fact that editorial skills are essential to the creation of high quality electronic databases
  15. Meadows, J.: Electronic publishing and the humanities (1995) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Considers the issues involved in electronic publishing for the humanities: the transition from old methods of publishing to the new; primary texts; secondary texts; ways in which the new media are used; the transition to electronic publishing; electronic books and electronic periodicals; and the impact of these factors on libraries
  16. Electronic publishing : applications and implications (1997) 0.00
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    Abstract
    This book addresses some of the most perplexing issues related to the widening use of electronic media as a supplement to, or substitute for, paper-based print. These issues include access rights, preservation, standards, and copyright, among others. The book also provides a look at some proposals, prototypes, and processes in electronic publishing
  17. Muresan, S.; Gonzalez-Ibanez, R.; Ghosh, D.; Wacholder, N.: Identification of nonliteral language in social media : a case study on sarcasm (2016) 0.00
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    Abstract
    With the rapid development of social media, spontaneously user-generated content such as tweets and forum posts have become important materials for tracking people's opinions and sentiments online. A major hurdle for current state-of-the-art automatic methods for sentiment analysis is the fact that human communication often involves the use of sarcasm or irony, where the author means the opposite of what she/he says. Sarcasm transforms the polarity of an apparently positive or negative utterance into its opposite. Lack of naturally occurring utterances labeled for sarcasm is one of the key problems for the development of machine-learning methods for sarcasm detection. We report on a method for constructing a corpus of sarcastic Twitter messages in which determination of the sarcasm of each message has been made by its author. We use this reliable corpus to compare sarcastic utterances in Twitter to utterances that express positive or negative attitudes without sarcasm. We investigate the impact of lexical and pragmatic factors on machine-learning effectiveness for identifying sarcastic utterances and we compare the performance of machine-learning techniques and human judges on this task.
  18. Sutton, B.: Toward world literature in electronic formats : three promising technical development (1994) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Examined 3 technical advances that may hasten the day when electronic representations of literary texts will be a regular part of library service: the network delivery of electronic texts, extended character codes, and markup language. Problems in the creation and dissemination of electronic texts include intellectual property issues, retrospective conversion of printed texts to electronic form, the establishment of archives and the need for alternative cataloguing procedures for the new media. Efforts are being made to extend ASCII character codes in order to be able to represent fully all the forms of wrting found in the world's languages, and use of SGML will enable important aspects of a books's structural organisation to be retained in its electronic form
  19. Bainbrifge, D.I.: Copyright in relation to electronic publishing in the humanities (1995) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Discusses the basic principles of copyright law with particular reference to electronic media or any materials that are transmitted electronically. Considers the European Community (EC) directives and proposals affecting electronic publishing. Discusses copyright problems relating to electronic works and the legal liability of facilitators. Comments on the opinion, held by some commentators, that the mass transposition of all manner of published works to electronic storage will create insuperable problems for intellectual property rights and that copyright law will collapse
  20. Brown, D.J.: Electronic publishing and libraries : Planning for the impact and growth to 2003 (1996) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Reports results of a study, conducted by DJB Associates on behalf of the British Library, to forecast the future trends in electronic publishing during the period 1995 to 2003. The emphasis is on scholarly publishing and the project, initiated by the BL, Corporate Research Group, aimed to help in the BL's assessment of the acqusition policy for electronic media

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