The Computer Journal
Semiotics, information science, documents and computers
Journal of Documentation
The Literate-Programming Paradigm
Computer
Logic and information
Literate programming
The SGML implementation guide: a blueprint for SGML migration
The SGML implementation guide: a blueprint for SGML migration
Information ecologies: using technology with heart
Information ecologies: using technology with heart
Developing SGML DTDs: From Text to Model to Markup
Developing SGML DTDs: From Text to Model to Markup
Towards a semantics for XML markup
Proceedings of the 2002 ACM symposium on Document engineering
interactions - Funology
Technology as Experience
Human-centered design considered harmful
interactions - Ambient intelligence: exploring our living environment
Introduction to Data Base Systems: Custom Edition for Virginia College
Introduction to Data Base Systems: Custom Edition for Virginia College
SIGDOC '07 Proceedings of the 25th annual ACM international conference on Design of communication
Semiotic engineering in practice: redesigning the CoScripter interface
AVI '08 Proceedings of the working conference on Advanced visual interfaces
Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Semantic Systems
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In most discussions about information and knowledge management, natural language is described as too fuzzy, ambiguous, and changing to serve as a basis for the development of large-scale tools and systems. Instead, artificial formal languages are developed and used to represent, hopefully in an unambiguous and precise way, the information or knowledge to be managed. Intertextual semantics (IS) adopts an almost exactly opposite point of view: Natural language is the foundation on which information management tools and systems should be developed, and the usefulness of artificial formalisms used in the process lies exclusively in our ability to derive natural language from them. In this article, we introduce IS, its origins, and underlying hypotheses and principles, and argue that even if its basic principles seem remote from current trends in design, IS is actually compatible with—and complementary to—those trends, especially semiotic engineering (C.S. de Souza, [2005a]). We also hint at further possible application areas, such as interface and interaction design, and the design of concrete objects. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.