Journal articles
Tie strength distribution in scientific collaboration networks.
Phys. Rev. E, 90(3):032804, 2014.
Qing Ke and Yong-Yeol Ahn.
[doi]
[BibTeX]
Conference articles
Evaluating visual and statistical exploration of scientific literature networks..
In: G. Costagliola, A. J. Ko, A. Cypher, J. Nichols, C. Scaffidi, C. Kelleher and B. A. Myers, editors,
VL/HCC, pages 217-224.
IEEE, 2011.
Robert Gove, Cody Dunne, Ben Shneiderman, Judith Klavans and Bonnie J. Dorr.
[doi]
[BibTeX]
Book chapters
Academic Publication Management with PUMA – Collect, Organize and Share Publications.
In:
M. Lalmas, J. Jose, A. Rauber, F. Sebastiani and I. Frommholz, editors,
Research and Advanced Technology for Digital Libraries, pages 417-420.
Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2010.
Dominik Benz, Andreas Hotho, Robert Jäschke, Gerd Stumme, Axel Halle, Angela Gerlach Sanches Lima, Helge Steenweg and Sven Stefani.
[doi]
[abstract]
[BibTeX]
The PUMA project fosters the Open Access movement und aims at a better support of the researcher’s publication work. PUMA stands for an integrated solution, where the upload of a publication results automatically in an update of both the personal and institutional homepage, the creation of an entry in a social bookmarking systems like BibSonomy, an entry in the academic reporting system of the university, and its publication in the institutional repository. In this poster, we present the main features of our solution.
Journal articles
Summarizing Scientific Articles - Experiments with Relevance and Rhetorical Status.
Computational Linguistics, 28:2002, 2002.
Simone Teufel and Marc Moens.
[doi]
[abstract]
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this paper we argue that scientific articles require a different summarization strategy than, for instance, news articles. We propose a strategy which concentrates on the rhetorical status of statements in the article: Material for summaries is selected in such a way that summaries can highlight the new contribution of the source paper and situate it with respect to earlier work. We provide a gold standard for summaries of this kind consisting of a substantial corpus of conference articles in computational linguistics with human judgements of rhetorical status and relevance. We present several experiments measuring our judges' agreement on these annotations. We also present an algorithm which, on the basis of the annotated training material, selects content and classifies it into a fixed set of seven rhetorical categories. The output of this extraction and classification system can be viewed as a single-document summary in its own right; alternatively, it can be used to generate task-oriented and user-tailored summaries designed to give users an overview of a scientific field.
Scientific collaboration networks. I. Network construction and fundamental results.
Phys. Rev. E, 64(1):016131, 2001.
M. E. J. Newman.
[doi]
[BibTeX]