Most recent edit on 2005-04-02 04:28:01 by DerekHansen
Additions:
Deletions:
Shay David, Geri Gay, Carl Lagoze, Bing Pan, Simeon Warner, (2005) Appraise – Beyond Threaded Conversations in Scholarly Publishing
Comments by AdelePontes
We have a common object of study: scholarly discourse. We're mostly interested in the ongoing discussion process before (and that may conclude with) document elaboration. Your main focus seems to be on *publishing*, instead of *discussion*. Have you investigated how much discussion is supported by the informal document network structure (regarding turn-taking, ideas sequencing, topic/subtopic structure, the emergence of embryonic ideas, and so on), and how much of it is "hidden" within the documents?
AdelePontes
[Please insert comments in this section followed by your WikiName]
Edited on 2005-04-02 04:25:28 by DerekHansen
Additions:
Shay David, Geri Gay, Carl Lagoze, Bing Pan, Simeon Warner, (2005) Appraise – Beyond Threaded Conversations in Scholarly Publishing
Deletions:
David Shay, Geri Gay, Carl Lagoze, Bing Pan, Simeon Warner, (2005) Appraise – Beyond Threaded Conversations in Scholarly Publishing
Edited on 2005-03-28 14:06:45 by AdelePontes
Additions:
Comments by AdelePontes
We have a common object of study: scholarly discourse. We're mostly interested in the ongoing discussion process before (and that may conclude with) document elaboration. Your main focus seems to be on *publishing*, instead of *discussion*. Have you investigated how much discussion is supported by the informal document network structure (regarding turn-taking, ideas sequencing, topic/subtopic structure, the emergence of embryonic ideas, and so on), and how much of it is "hidden" within the documents?
AdelePontes
Edited on 2005-01-31 16:10:01 by DerekHansen
Additions:
[Please insert comments in this section followed by your WikiName]
Deletions:
Oldest known version of this page was edited on 2005-01-31 16:00:43 by DerekHansen []
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David Shay, Geri Gay, Carl Lagoze, Bing Pan, Simeon Warner, (2005)
Appraise – Beyond Threaded Conversations in Scholarly Publishing