The boomerang effect: retrieving scientific documents via the network of references and citations
SIGIR '02 Proceedings of the 25th annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval
Slash(dot) and burn: distributed moderation in a large online conversation space
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Review on Computational Trust and Reputation Models
Artificial Intelligence Review
Hotlist or Bibliography? A Case of Genre on the Web
HICSS '06 Proceedings of the 39th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences - Volume 03
Using citations for ranking in digital libraries
Proceedings of the 6th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries
CiteSearch: next-generation citation analysis
Proceedings of the 7th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries
Toward alternative measures for ranking venues: a case of database research community
Proceedings of the 7th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries
A user reputation model for a user-interactive question answering system: Research Articles
Concurrency and Computation: Practice & Experience - Progress of the Knowledge Grid (SKG2005)
Fighting Spam on Social Web Sites: A Survey of Approaches and Future Challenges
IEEE Internet Computing
Using reputation to augment explicit authorization
Proceedings of the 2007 ACM workshop on Digital identity management
Can social bookmarking improve web search?
WSDM '08 Proceedings of the 2008 International Conference on Web Search and Data Mining
Collaboration support for bibliographic data
International Journal of Web Based Communities
The anti-social tagger: detecting spam in social bookmarking systems
AIRWeb '08 Proceedings of the 4th international workshop on Adversarial information retrieval on the web
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal
TPDL'11 Proceedings of the 15th international conference on Theory and practice of digital libraries: research and advanced technology for digital libraries
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Bibliographic digital libraries play a significant role in conducting research and, in the past few years, have started to move from closed to more open social platforms. However, in this, they have faced challenges (e.g., from Web spam) in maintaining the level of scholarly precision--the ratio of relevant citations retrieved by search. This paper describes a hybrid approach that uses online social collaboration and reputation based social moderation to reduce the cost and to speed up the construction of scholarly bibliographies that are comprehensive, have better quality citations and higher precision. We implemented selected social features for an established digital humanities project (the Cervantes Project) and compared the results with a number of closed and open current bibliographies. We found this can help in building scholarly bibliographies and significantly improve precision outcomes.