Scraping the ACM Digital Library
ACM SIGIR Forum
An Architecture for Automatic Reference Linking
ECDL '01 Proceedings of the 5th European Conference on Research and Advanced Technology for Digital Libraries
Learning metadata from the evidence in an on-line citation matching scheme
Proceedings of the 6th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries
Logical document conversion: combining functional and formal knowledge
Proceedings of the 2007 ACM symposium on Document engineering
Document clustering of scientific texts using citation contexts
Information Retrieval
Automated template-based metadata extraction architecture
ICADL'07 Proceedings of the 10th international conference on Asian digital libraries: looking back 10 years and forging new frontiers
Evidence-based information extraction for high accuracy citation and author name identification
Large Scale Semantic Access to Content (Text, Image, Video, and Sound)
Mathematical knowledge browser with automatic hyperlink detection
MKM'05 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Mathematical Knowledge Management
Legislative digital library: online and off-line database of laws
ECDL'05 Proceedings of the 9th European conference on Research and Advanced Technology for Digital Libraries
DASFAA'05 Proceedings of the 10th international conference on Database Systems for Advanced Applications
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The Web, with its explosive growth, is becoming an efficient resource for up-to-date information for the scientific researcher. Informal online archives are repositories for technical reports. Proceedings are more and more commonly published on the Web. The collection of online journals is growing. Indeed, a good number of online journals are "born digital". Many researchers simply put their papers up on their own web site. The large volume of online material makes it quite desirable to be able to access cited documents immediately from the citing paper. Implementing this direct access is called "reference linking". Some reference linking services exist today. A number of commercial publishers, recognizing the significant value-added nature of reference linking, have banded together to form the CrossRef organization. The CrossRef publishers share their metadata, which enables them to interlink their journals. This metadata is not, however, available without a fee to organizations or individuals outside of CrossRef. The vast majority of online scholarly literature is accompanied by little or no metadata. Since it is desirable to link up this literature as well, the problem of automatically reference linking online scholarly literature in the absence of metadata and author intervention is a problem very much worth considering. This paper explores this problem in detail, and presents some algorithms for extracting metadata from online texts and linking full-text documents together. The extent to which reference linking of the online literature can be done automatically is therefore the main topic of this paper.