Expressing rhetorical relations in instructional text: a case study of the purpose relation
Computational Linguistics
Computational Linguistics
Proceedings of the 13th international World Wide Web conference on Alternate track papers & posters
Can text structure be incompatible with rhetorical structure?
INLG '00 Proceedings of the first international conference on Natural language generation - Volume 14
Sensemaking tools for understanding research literatures: Design, implementation and user evaluation
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Modelling discourse in contested domains: a semiotic and cognitive framework
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
ESWC'05 Proceedings of the Second European conference on The Semantic Web: research and Applications
STAN: Social, Trusted Annotation Network
ASWC '08 Proceedings of the 3rd Asian Semantic Web Conference on The Semantic Web
Towards automatic extraction of epistemic items from scientific publications
Proceedings of the 2010 ACM Symposium on Applied Computing
Dimensions of formality: a case study for MKM in software engineering
AISC'10/MKM'10/Calculemus'10 Proceedings of the 10th ASIC and 9th MKM international conference, and 17th Calculemus conference on Intelligent computer mathematics
New trends for reading scientific documents
Proceedings of the 4th ACM workshop on Online books, complementary social media and crowdsourcing
Faceted documents: describing document characteristics using semantic lenses
Proceedings of the 2012 ACM symposium on Document engineering
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In this paper we present a solution for "weaving the claim web", i.e. the creation of knowledge networks via so-called claims stated in scientific publications created with the SALT (Semantically Annotated LATEX) framework. To attain this objective, we provide support for claim identification, evolved the appropriate ontologies and defined a claim citation and reference mechanism. We also describe a prototypical claim search engine, which allows to reference to existing claims and hence, weave the web. Finally, we performed a small-scale evaluation of the authoring framework with a quite promising outcome.