🔗 Permalink : https://doi.org/1866/13000
Drilling for Papers in INKE
Article [Accepted Manuscript]
Is part of
Scholarly and research communication ; vol. 3, no. 1.Author(s)
Affiliation
- Université de Montréal. Faculté des arts et des sciences. Département des littératures de langue française
- Université de Montréal. Faculté des arts et des sciences. Département de littératures et de langues du monde
- Université de Montréal. Chaire de recherche du Canada sur les écritures numériques
- Université de Montréal. Canada Research Chair on Digital Textualities
Abstract(s)
In this article, we discuss the first year research plan for the INKE interface design team, which focuses on a prototype for chaining. Interpretable as a subclass of Unsworths scholarly primitive of discovering, chaining is the process of beginning with an exemplary article, then finding the articles that it cites, the articles they cite, and so on until the reader begins to get a feel for the terrain. The chaining strategy is of particular utility for scholars working in new areas, either through doing background work for interdisciplinary interests or else by pursuing a subtopic in a domain that generates a paper storm of publications every year. In our prototype project, we plan to produce a system that accepts a seed article, tunnels through a number of levels of citation, and generates a summary report listing the most frequent authors and articles. One of the innovative features of this prototype is its use of the experimental oil and water interface effect, which uses text animation to provide the user with a sense of the underlying process.
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