Proceedings of the fourteenth ACM conference on Hypertext and hypermedia
The evolution of US state government home pages from 1997 to 2002
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies - Special issue on HCI and MIS
Genres as a tool for understanding and analyzing user experience in games
CHI '04 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems
The appropriateness of Swedish municipality web site designs
Proceedings of the 4th Nordic conference on Human-computer interaction: changing roles
Genre identification and goal-focused summarization
Proceedings of the sixteenth ACM conference on Conference on information and knowledge management
Zero, single, or multi? Genre of web pages through the users' perspective
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal
Electronic word-of-mouth: a genre approach to consumer communities
International Journal of Web Based Communities
Person identification from text and speech genre samples
EACL '09 Proceedings of the 12th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics
Information interaction in 140 characters or less: genres on twitter
Proceedings of the third symposium on Information interaction in context
Cybergenre: automatic identification of home pages on the web
Journal of Web Engineering
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Under the influence of a new medium, a genre may evolve into variants of the original genre or even into new genre. The computer-Internet combination has resulted in the emergence of cybergenre, a new class of genre characterized by the triple, . Users approach instances of cybergenre with certain expectations with respect to functionality, as well as to form and content. This paper examines the "functionality" attribute of various cybergenre in an attempt to identify the essential functionality this new medium affords us, so we may use genre more effectively in the design of computer and network-based applications.