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Book Cover
E-book
Author Kembellec, GĂ©rald

Title Reading and Writing Knowledge in Scientific Communities
Published Newark : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, 2017

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Description 1 online resource (193 pages)
Contents Cover; Half-Title Page; Title Page; Copyright Page; Contents; Acknowledgements; Foreword: Reading and Writing in New Systems of Digital Documentality; 1. Introduction to Scientific Reading and Writing and to Technical Modalities of Augmentation; 1.1. Introduction; 1.2. The digital humanities ; 1.2.1. Field of practice; 1.2.2. A disciplinary movement; 1.3. Notable features of reading and writing ; 1.3.1. Scientific reading and writing; 1.3.2. Ecrilecture: a major concept in the digital humanities; 1.4. Current hypertext technologies ; 1.4.1. From hypertext to the data web
1.4.2. Specific elements of scientific augmentation: examples1.5. Conclusion; 1.6. Bibliography; 2. Ecrilecture and the Construction of Knowledge within Professional Communities; 2.1. Introduction; 2.2. Ecrilecture and research practices: state of the art ; 2.2.1. The act of ecrilecture; 2.2.2. Writing as a product of ecrilecture; 2.2.3. Methodological questions and results; 2.3. Ecrilecture: an informational activity in a professional context ; 2.3.1. An "invisible" informational practice; 2.3.2. Ecrilecture as support for professional activities
2.4. Ecrilecture: production of an augmented document 2.4.1. Products of ecrilecture; 2.4.2. Differences between disciplines and research aims; 2.5. Ecrilecture: a factor in structuring and constructing knowledge; 2.6. Conclusion; 2.7. Bibliography; 3. "Critical Spaces": A Study of the Necessary Conditions for Scholarly and Multimedia Reading; 3.1. Critical positioning and operations; 3.1.1. Writing and spatial structures; 3.1.2. The chain of reading; 3.2. The critical mechanism: tensions between material, meaning and space ; 3.2.1. Technical environment of criticism
3.2.2. Digital materiality3.2.3. From document to critical space: observations and directions for design; 3.3. Bibliography; 4. "Annotate the World, and Improve Humanity": Material Imageries in a Web Annotation Program; 4.1. Serving of all humanity: the aims and claims of Hypothes.is; 4.1.1. The political implications of "information"; 4.1.2. mythologies, ideologies and primitive foundation scenes: from the circle to the network and from the network to the world; 4.1.3. Provisional assessment: same ideological basis, different positions
4.2. Materialized and imaginary visions reformulated through software4.2.1. Frameworks, signs and actions: values present in the program; 4.2.2. Border and visuals; 4.3. Conclusion; 4.4. Bibliography; 5. Construction of Ecrilecture Standards for Collaborative Transcription of Digitized Heritage; 5.1. Introduction; 5.2. Participatory enrichment of digitized collections: institutional regulation and community ecrilecture practices; 5.2.1. Regulation of ecrilecture approaches and institutional criteria; 5.2.2. Atomized and community approaches to ecrilecture
Notes 5.3. Providing Internet users with the means for scientific ecrilecture
Print version record
Subject Technical writing.
Communication in science.
technical writing.
Communication in science
Technical writing
Form Electronic book
Author Broudoux, Evelyne
ISBN 9781119384373
1119384370