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4,931 result(s) for "Bibliographical citations."
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Cite it : selecting credible sources
Explains how to find and evaluate sources for research projects and the importance of providing citations for reference sources.
Article-Level Metrics and the Evolution of Scientific Impact
  [...]we need good filters for quality, importance, and relevance to apply to scientific literature. BioMedCentral, PLoS, and BMJ have all had commenting platforms for several years (see Figures 1 and 2 for examples), and while certain papers have extensive discussions [12]-[15], these are the exception rather than the rule. [...]highly commented papers tend to fall under the category of \"front matter\" rather than primary research (e.g., a recent Perspective article in PLoS Biology had 17 comments and over 20,000 page views on 4 October 2009 [16]).\\n It is clear that all of the types of data provide different dimensions, which together can give a clearer picture of an article's impact.
Skills & standards. Skills : annotating
Annotations are notes that a reader makes to a text. They help you familiarize yourself with both the content and organization of what you read. Let’s discover ways you can annotate a text.
Arts of Memory, Ancient Manuscript Technologies, and the Aims of Theology
This article explores how ancient rhetorical theories about the improvement of human memory were applied to manuscripts in the form of paratextual ordering systems. It then considers the intellectual implications of these technological changes in the management of textual knowledge. A sequentially ordered system for dividing textual information into “chapters” or “verses” proved powerful for both mnemonic arts and textual arts. The article next explores a specific example of paratextual technologies in Priscillian of Avila’s fourth-century CE Canones Epistularum Pauli Apostoli, which is one of the most sophisticated cross-referencing systems ever produced prior to printed texts. The article concludes by reflecting on the implications of textual divisions and citation schemes for the work of theology. The test case for this is Priscillian’s “versification” of the Pauline corpus for purposes of textual abstraction (the extraction and reorganization of numerically divided textual parts) in service of theological abstraction (the attempt to create systematic wholes out of the newly reorganized parts).
Linking Libraries to the Web: Linked Data and the Future of the Bibliographic Record
The ideas behind Linked Data and the Semantic Web have recently gained ground and shown the potential to redefine the world of the web. Linked Data could conceivably create a huge database out of the internet, linked by relationships understandable by both humans and machines. The benefits of Linked Data to libraries and their users are potentially great, but so are the many challenges to its implementation. The BIBFRAME Initiative provides the possible framework that will link library resources with the web, bringing them out of their information silos and making them accessible to all users.