Methodological foundations of KEATS, the knowledge engineer's assistant
Knowledge Acquisition
Grounding GDMs: a structured case study
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Solving VT in VITAL: a study in model construction and knowledge reuse
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies - Special issue: the Sisyphus-VT initiative
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Extracting focused knowledge from the semantic web
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Automatic Ontology-Based Knowledge Extraction from Web Documents
IEEE Intelligent Systems
Identifying Communities of Practice through Ontology Network Analysis
IEEE Intelligent Systems
CS AKTive Space, or How We Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Semantic Web
IEEE Intelligent Systems
IEEE Intelligent Systems
TurKit: human computation algorithms on mechanical turk
UIST '10 Proceedings of the 23nd annual ACM symposium on User interface software and technology
The jabberwocky programming environment for structured social computing
Proceedings of the 24th annual ACM symposium on User interface software and technology
Knowledge acquisition: Past, present and future
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
From knowledge science to symbiosis science
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Social machines: a unified paradigm to describe social web-oriented systems
Proceedings of the 22nd international conference on World Wide Web companion
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In this issue Brian Gaines (Gaines, 2012) provides a magisterial review of the origins of human kind and human knowledge. It is a reminder that in spite of all our technology it takes a very special type of scholarship to weave such a compelling narrative over such a monumental range of time and material. This article takes a number of strands of Gaines' arguments and presents them in the context of my own, colleagues and the field's research trajectory.