Communications of the ACM
Spatial hypertext and the practice of information triage
HYPERTEXT '97 Proceedings of the eighth ACM conference on Hypertext
Designing Dexter-based hypermedia services for the World Wide Web
HYPERTEXT '97 Proceedings of the eighth ACM conference on Hypertext
Integrating open hypermedia systems with the World Wide Web
HYPERTEXT '97 Proceedings of the eighth ACM conference on Hypertext
Annotea: an open RDF infrastructure for shared Web annotations
Proceedings of the 10th international conference on World Wide Web
Authoring and annotation of web pages in CREAM
Proceedings of the 11th international conference on World Wide Web
Semantics happen: knowledge building in spatial hypertext
Proceedings of the thirteenth ACM conference on Hypertext and hypermedia
Managing RDF Metadata for Community Webs
ER '00 Proceedings of the Workshops on Conceptual Modeling Approaches for E-Business and The World Wide Web and Conceptual Modeling: Conceptual Modeling for E-Business and the Web
Xspect: bridging open hypermedia and XLink
WWW '03 Proceedings of the 12th international conference on World Wide Web
A visual environment for dynamic web application composition
Proceedings of the fourteenth ACM conference on Hypertext and hypermedia
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This paper proposes a new framework for organizing and accessing Web resources using loci defined on arbitrary Web documents. Our framework allows users to store Web resources in user-specified loci on a Web document to define a relation among them. This relation is retained as a set of tuples in a table called a Topica table. When users access such a locus, the resources associated with this locus are presented on the display screen. Each locus is associated with an attribute of the Topica table associated with this document. Our framework enables users to dynamically define such loci, called topoi, on arbitrary Web documents, and to input and/or output tuples of Web resources to and from a set of topoi defined on each of these Web documents. In addition, we propose a mechanism to access multiple related resources using a history of users' navigation through such documents.