Hypertext writing and document reuse: The role of a semantic net
Electronic Publishing—Origination, Dissemination, and Design
AHAM: a Dexter-based reference model for adaptive hypermedia
Proceedings of the tenth ACM Conference on Hypertext and hypermedia : returning to our diverse roots: returning to our diverse roots
Hypertext and knowledge management
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Stepwise Construction of the Dedekind-MacNeille Completion (Research Note)
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A network-based approach to text handling for the on-line scientific community
A network-based approach to text handling for the on-line scientific community
qwikWeb: integrating mailing list and WikiWikiWeb for group communication
Proceedings of the 2005 international symposium on Wikis
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Artificial Intelligence for Engineering Design, Analysis and Manufacturing - Special Issue: Design Spaces: The Explicit Representation of Spaces of Alternatives
AniAniWeb: a wiki approach to personal home pages
Proceedings of the 2007 international symposium on Wikis
Wiki anxiety: impediments to implementing wikis for IT support groups
Proceedings of the Symposium on Computer Human Interaction for the Management of Information Technology
Designing for privacy in personal learning spaces
The New Review of Hypermedia and Multimedia - Special issue: Observing users of digital educational technologies
Semantic wikis for personal knowledge management
DEXA'06 Proceedings of the 17th international conference on Database and Expert Systems Applications
Eyes of a wiki: automated navigation map
ICADL'05 Proceedings of the 8th international conference on Asian Digital Libraries: implementing strategies and sharing experiences
What makes corporate wikis work? wiki affordances and their suitability for corporate knowledge work
DESRIST'12 Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Design Science Research in Information Systems: advances in theory and practice
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A wiki hypertext is typically accessible and editable by all. While this removes impediments to collaboration, it often deters participants who would rather incubate ideas before bringing them to the group. This is especially the case where creative ideas are at stake. Creating additional wikis with restricted access is a costly solution: it requires participants to distinguish between and navigate between wikis; it requires administrators to construct wikis and their access rules; and it does not account for the movement of content from private to public. In this paper, we describe a system that augments the hypertext in order to solve these problems. This system automatically creates and maintains access rules in response to browsing and editing of the wiki hypertext. In doing so, it improves the targeting of documents in the hypertext, and identifies significant collections of documents and participants.