Computational hypertext in biological modelling
HYPERTEXT '89 Proceedings of the second annual ACM conference on Hypertext
HYPERTEXT '89 Proceedings of the second annual ACM conference on Hypertext
Beyond the electronic book: a critique of hypertext rhetoric
HYPERTEXT '91 Proceedings of the third annual ACM conference on Hypertext
HDM—a model-based approach to hypertext application design
ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS)
Page and link classifications: connecting diverse resources
Proceedings of the third ACM conference on Digital libraries
Building a dynamic lexicon from a digital library
Proceedings of the 8th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries
NLPIR4DL '09 Proceedings of the 2009 Workshop on Text and Citation Analysis for Scholarly Digital Libraries
Transferring structural markup across translations using multilingual alignment and projection
Proceedings of the 10th annual joint conference on Digital libraries
Extracting two thousand years of latin from a million book library
Journal on Computing and Cultural Heritage (JOCCH)
CICLing'13 Proceedings of the 14th international conference on Computational Linguistics and Intelligent Text Processing - Volume Part I
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Hypertext allows academics to structure and manipulate their ideas in a radically new way, but it should also reinforce traditional scholarly activity. Those designing Hypertext systems that are intended for the general academic market must be careful to support not only new possibilities, but those functions with which academics are already familiar. Further, many scholars hope that their documents will be useful for decades to come. We need standard document architectures that will separate a particular Hypertext from the system in which it was designed.