A translation approach to portable ontology specifications
Knowledge Acquisition - Special issue: Current issues in knowledge modeling
Student readers' use of library documents: implications for library technologies
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
intelligence
Patron-augmented digital libraries
DL '00 Proceedings of the fifth ACM conference on Digital libraries
Supporting collaborative interpretation in distributed Groupware
CSCW '00 Proceedings of the 2000 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work
A Graph-Oriented Model for Articulation of Ontology Interdependencies
EDBT '00 Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Extending Database Technology: Advances in Database Technology
A Context-Based Audiovisual Representation Model for Audiovisual Information Systems
CONTEXT '99 Proceedings of the Second International and Interdisciplinary Conference on Modeling and Using Context
Self organization of a massive document collection
IEEE Transactions on Neural Networks
Porphyry 2001: Semantics for Scholarly Publications Retrieval
ISMIS '02 Proceedings of the 13th International Symposium on Foundations of Intelligent Systems
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This paper deals with the conceptual structures which describe document contents in a digital library. Indeed, the underlying question is about the truth of a description: obvious (ontological), by convention (normative) or based on interpretation (hermeneutical). In the first part, we examine the differences between these three points of view and choose the hermeneutical one. Then in the second and third part, we present two "assisted interpretation systems" (AIS) for digital libraries (audiovisual documents and scholarly publications). Both provide a dynamic annotation framework for readers' augmentations and social interactions. In the fourth part, a few synthetic guidelines are given to design such "assisted interpretation systems" in other digital libraries.