Scholarly Discourse
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A Scholarly Discourse is a structured discourse of scientific statements.
- AKA: Academic Discourse, Scholarly Communication.
- Example(s):
- See: Scholarly, Discourse, Research Document.
References
2014
- (Clark et al., 2014) ⇒ Tim Clark, Paolo Ciccarese, and Carole Goble. (2014). “Micropublications: A Semantic Model for Claims, Evidence, Arguments and Annotations in Biomedical Communications.” In: Journal of Biomedical Semantics, 5(1).
- QUOTE: Scientific publications are documentary representations of defeasible arguments, supported by data and repeatable methods. They are the essential mediating artifacts in the ecosystem of scientific communications. The institutional “goal” of science]] is publishing results. The linear document publication format, dating from 1665, has survived transition to the Web.
2000
- (Shumuckingham et al., 2000) ⇒ Simon B. Shumuckingham, Enrico Motta, and John Domingue. (2000). “ScholOnto: An Ontology-based Digital Library Server for Research Documents and Discourse." International Journal on Digital Libraries 3, no. 3
1998
- (Sumner & Shum, 1998) ⇒ Tamara Sumner, and Simon Buckingham Shum. (1998). “From Documents to Discourse: Shifting Conceptions of Scholarly Publishing.” In: Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. ISBN:0-201-30987-4 doi:10.1109/APCHI.1998.704222
- QUOTE: We are looking at how new forms of document interface can be used to support new forms of scholarly discourse, and ultimately, new models of scholarly publishing. The vehicle we use to conduct this research is the Digital Document Discourse Environment (D3E).