853 resultados para scholarly publishing
Resumo:
Open access iiiovemerit and open source software movement plays an important role in creation of knowledge, knowledge management and knowledge dissemination. Scholarly communication and publishing are increasingly taking place in the electronic environment. With a growing proportion of the scholarly record now existing only in digital format, serious issues regarding access and preservation are being raised that are central to future scholarship. Institutional Repositories provide access to past. present and future scholarly literature and research documentation; ensures its preservation; assists users in discovery and use; and offers educational programs to enable users to develop lifelong literacy. This paper explores these aspects on how IR of Cochin University of Science & Technology supports scientific community for knowledge creation. knowledge Management, and knowledge dissemination.
Resumo:
Scholarly communication over the past 10 to 15 years has gained a tremendous momentum with the advent of Internet and the World Wide Web. The web has transformed the ways by which people search, find, use and communicate information. Innovations in web technology since 2005 have brought out an array of new services and facilities and an enhanced version of the web named Web 2.0. Web 2.0 facilitates a collaborative environment in which the information users can interact with the information. Web 2.0 enables its users to create, annotate, review, share re-use and represent the information in new ways thereby optimizing the information dissemination
Resumo:
A profile is a finite sequence of vertices of a graph. The set of all vertices of the graph which minimises the sum of the distances to the vertices of the profile is the median of the profile. Any subset of the vertex set such that it is the median of some profile is called a median set. The number of median sets of a graph is defined to be the median number of the graph. In this paper, we identify the median sets of various classes of graphs such as Kp − e, Kp,q forP > 2, and wheel graph and so forth. The median numbers of these graphs and hypercubes are found out, and an upper bound for the median number of even cycles is established.We also express the median number of a product graph in terms of the median number of their factors.
Resumo:
Bewegt man sich als Studentin oder Student in psychologischen, medizinischen oder pädagogischen Studiengängen, ist häufig eine systematische Literaturrecherche unerlässlich, um sich über den neuesten Forschungsstand in einem bestimmten Themenfeld zu informieren oder sich in ein neues Thema beispielsweise für die Abschlussarbeit einzuarbeiten. Literaturrecherchen sind zentraler Bestandteil jeden wissenschaftlichen Arbeitens. Die recherchierten Literaturangaben und Quellen bilden die Bausteine, auf denen die Darstellung des Wissens in Hausarbeiten, Magister-, Diplomarbeiten und später Doktorarbeiten basiert. In Form von Quellenangaben, z.B. durch indirekte oder direkte Zitate oder Paraphrasierungen werden Bezugnahmen auf die bereits vorhandene Literatur transparent gemacht. Häufig genügt ein Blick auf eine Literaturliste um zu erkennen, wie Literatur gesucht und zusammengestellt wurde. Wissenschaftliches Arbeiten unterscheidet sich von künstlerischem Arbeiten durch seine Systematik und intersubjektive Nachvollziehbarkeit. Diese Systematik sollte bereits bei der Literaturrecherche beginnen und sich am Ende der Arbeit in der Literaturliste widerspiegeln. Auch wenn in einer Magister-, Diplom- und noch weniger in einer Hausarbeit die gesamte, gefundene Literatur verwendet wird, sondern nur eine sehr kleine Auswahl in die Arbeit einfließt, ist es anstrebenswert, sich über die möglichen Suchstrategien im Einzelnen klar zu werden und sich systematisch durch den Berg von Literatur(einträgen) nach einer Recherche zu einer einschlägigen und begründeten Auswahl vorzuarbeiten. Hier stellen die schnell wachsenden Wissensbestände eine besondere Herausforderung an Studierende und Wissenschaftler. Die Recherche am „Zettelkasten‟ in der Bibliothek ist durch die Online-Recherche ersetzt worden. Wissenschaftliche Literatur wird heute in erster Linie digital gesucht, gefunden und verwaltet. Für die Literatursuche steht eine Vielfalt an Suchmaschinen zur Verfügung. Doch welche ist die richtige? Und wie suche ich systematisch? Wie dokumentiere ich meine Suche? Wie komme ich an die Literatur und wie verwalte ich die Literatur? Diese und weitere Fragen haben auch wir uns gestellt und für alle Studierenden der Fächer Psychologie, Psychoanalyse, Medizin und Pädagogik diese Handreichung geschrieben. Sie will eine Hilfe bei der konkreten Umsetzung einer Literaturrecherche sein.
Resumo:
In this paper, we describe an interdisciplinary project in which visualization techniques were developed for and applied to scholarly work from literary studies. The aim was to bring Christof Schöch's electronic edition of Bérardier de Bataut's Essai sur le récit (1776) to the web. This edition is based on the Text Encoding Initiative's XML-based encoding scheme (TEI P5, subset TEI-Lite). This now de facto standard applies to machine-readable texts used chiefly in the humanities and social sciences. The intention of this edition is to make the edited text freely available on the web, to allow for alternative text views (here original and modern/corrected text), to ensure reader-friendly annotation and navigation, to permit on-line collaboration in encoding and annotation as well as user comments, all in an open source, generically usable, lightweight package. These aims were attained by relying on a GPL-based, public domain CMS (Drupal) and combining it with XSL-Stylesheets and Java Script.
Resumo:
Copy of widely available guide to academic writing Hartley, J., 2008. Academic writing and publishing: A practical handbook, Routledge.3. the Manchester Phrase bank (linked here too) gives example phrases for writing Also Chapter on writing introductions from book aimed at students for whom English is not their first language
Big Decisions and Sparse Data: Adapting Scientific Publishing to the Needs of Practical Conservation
Resumo:
The biggest challenge in conservation biology is breaking down the gap between research and practical management. A major obstacle is the fact that many researchers are unwilling to tackle projects likely to produce sparse or messy data because the results would be difficult to publish in refereed journals. The obvious solution to sparse data is to build up results from multiple studies. Consequently, we suggest that there needs to be greater emphasis in conservation biology on publishing papers that can be built on by subsequent research rather than on papers that produce clear results individually. This building approach requires: (1) a stronger theoretical framework, in which researchers attempt to anticipate models that will be relevant in future studies and incorporate expected differences among studies into those models; (2) use of modern methods for model selection and multi-model inference, and publication of parameter estimates under a range of plausible models; (3) explicit incorporation of prior information into each case study; and (4) planning management treatments in an adaptive framework that considers treatments applied in other studies. We encourage journals to publish papers that promote this building approach rather than expecting papers to conform to traditional standards of rigor as stand-alone papers, and believe that this shift in publishing philosophy would better encourage researchers to tackle the most urgent conservation problems.
Resumo:
Conflation of academic copyright issues with respect to books (whether text books, research monographs or popularisations) and research articles, is rife in the academic publishing industry. A charitable interpretation is that this is because to publishers they are all effectively the same: a product produced for commercial benefit. An uncharitable interpretation is that this is a classic Fear Uncertainty and Doubt approach, in an attempt to delay the inevitable move to Open Access (OA) to research articles. To authors, however, research articles and books are generally very different things. Research articles are produced without the expectation of direct financial return, whereas books generally include some consideration of financial return. Taylor’s “Copyright and research: an academic publisher’s perspective” (SCRIPT-ed 4:2) falls wholesale into this mental trap and in particular his lauding of the position paper of the Association of American Professional and Scholarly Publishers, shows a lack of understanding of the continuing huge loss to scholarship of a lack of OA to research articles. It should be regarded as a categorical imperative for scholars to embrace OA to research articles.