Proceedings of the nineteenth ACM conference on Hypertext and hypermedia

Peter Brusilovsky, H. Davis
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We believe that this approach has made the conference more accessible to newcomers, and this has been reflected in the increased quantity and quality of papers submitted. \n \nThe conference theme this year is \"linking people and places\" and celebrates the power and importance of the link, in its widest sense. \n \nThe first track, Information Linking and Organization, specifically targets the formal study of scholarly, structural, sculptural, spatial, open, dynamic and adaptive or any other type of hypertext (or Web-based Information System). In this track, researchers discuss models, architecture, interfaces, properties, or theory in general, about hypertext and hypermedia. \n \nThe second track, Applications of Hypertext, has been for many years the most difficult for people to scope; it targets descriptions of applications of hypertext, for example in healthcare, cultural heritage, education or industry, where the affordance of the link has in some way enabled a novel application. \n \nThe third track, Hypertext, Culture, and Communication, examines the creation and reception of literary machines ranging from literary fiction to creative nonfiction and scholarly argumentation. As hypertext reading and writing become ever more pervasive in society, the rhetoric of links continues to offer frequent surprises and unexpected opportunities. This year's papers integrate fresh insights into spontaneous forms and ephemeral social media with considered reflection on carefully crafted hypermedia. \n \nSocial Linking track expands the remit of the Social Hypertext track introduced in 2007. This track focuses on one of the most exciting recent developments in Web science, social annotation, by which users can easily markup other authors' resources via collaborative mechanisms such as tagging, filtering, voting, editing, classification, and rating. These social processes lead to the emergence of many types of links between texts, users, concepts, pages, articles, and media. The social linking track has immediately established itself as the most popular venue for this year's Hypertext technical submissions, covering several aspects of design, analysis, and modeling of information systems driven by social linking. 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引用次数: 18

Abstract

Welcome to the 19th ACM Conference on Hypertext and Hypermedia -- Hypertext 2008. One of the great joys of the Hypertext conference series has always been the diversity of the topics that the conference encompasses. Regular attendees have always known and valued this diversity, but the conference steering committee have been aware that it can be confusing to newcomers, and at times difficult for reviewers who have to decide whether a paper is 'in-scope' for the conference. This year we have refined the approach that we began last year, whereby we have had four separate tracks, each with their own chairs and committees; these committees have been responsible for selecting and briefing their reviewers and advertising the call for papers into their communities. We believe that this approach has made the conference more accessible to newcomers, and this has been reflected in the increased quantity and quality of papers submitted. The conference theme this year is "linking people and places" and celebrates the power and importance of the link, in its widest sense. The first track, Information Linking and Organization, specifically targets the formal study of scholarly, structural, sculptural, spatial, open, dynamic and adaptive or any other type of hypertext (or Web-based Information System). In this track, researchers discuss models, architecture, interfaces, properties, or theory in general, about hypertext and hypermedia. The second track, Applications of Hypertext, has been for many years the most difficult for people to scope; it targets descriptions of applications of hypertext, for example in healthcare, cultural heritage, education or industry, where the affordance of the link has in some way enabled a novel application. The third track, Hypertext, Culture, and Communication, examines the creation and reception of literary machines ranging from literary fiction to creative nonfiction and scholarly argumentation. As hypertext reading and writing become ever more pervasive in society, the rhetoric of links continues to offer frequent surprises and unexpected opportunities. This year's papers integrate fresh insights into spontaneous forms and ephemeral social media with considered reflection on carefully crafted hypermedia. Social Linking track expands the remit of the Social Hypertext track introduced in 2007. This track focuses on one of the most exciting recent developments in Web science, social annotation, by which users can easily markup other authors' resources via collaborative mechanisms such as tagging, filtering, voting, editing, classification, and rating. These social processes lead to the emergence of many types of links between texts, users, concepts, pages, articles, and media. The social linking track has immediately established itself as the most popular venue for this year's Hypertext technical submissions, covering several aspects of design, analysis, and modeling of information systems driven by social linking. The accepted papers represent a high-quality sample of research covering a broad range of social linking topics, which include the co-evolution of social, information, and semantic networks; formal models of social annotation and its behavioral patterns; link inference from blogs and social networks; applications to search, retrieval, recommendation, navigation, and scalability issues; information-theoretic aspects of socially-induced semantic networks; structure and dynamics of social information networks; and evaluation of mechanisms and interfaces for social linking systems. This is the third time the Hypertext Conference has been held in Pittsburgh. We are very fortunate, this time, to have excellent keynote presentations from Bernardo Huberman of HP Labs and Prof. Jon Kleinberg of Cornell University, and an excellent technical and social program to look forward to. In addition to the contributions featured in this volume Hypertext 2008 offered two workshops: ;) Web Science: Collaboration and Collective Intelligence organized by Weigang Wang (University of Manchester, UK) and David Millard (University of Southampton, UK) Creating out of the Machine: Hypertext, Hypermedia, and Web Artists Explore the Craft organized by Stephen Ersinghaus (Tunxis Community College, Connecticut, USA) )
第十九届ACM超文本和超媒体会议论文集
欢迎参加第19届ACM超文本和超媒体会议——超文本2008。超文本会议系列最大的乐趣之一就是会议所涵盖的主题的多样性。经常参加会议的人一直都知道并重视这种多样性,但会议指导委员会已经意识到,这可能会让新来者感到困惑,有时也会让审稿人难以决定一篇论文是否“在会议范围内”。今年我们改进了去年开始的方法,即我们有四个独立的轨道,每个轨道都有自己的主席和委员会;这些委员会负责选择并向审稿人介绍情况,并在他们的社区宣传论文征集。我们认为,这种做法使新与会者更容易参加会议,这反映在提交的论文数量和质量的提高上。今年会议的主题是“将人与地联系起来”,并从最广泛的意义上颂扬这种联系的力量和重要性。第一个轨道,信息链接和组织,专门针对学术,结构,雕塑,空间,开放,动态和自适应或任何其他类型的超文本(或基于web的信息系统)的正式研究。在这个轨道上,研究人员讨论了超文本和超媒体的模型、架构、接口、属性或一般理论。第二条轨道,超文本的应用,多年来一直是人们最难界定的;它的目标是描述超文本的应用程序,例如在医疗保健、文化遗产、教育或工业中,其中链接的提供性以某种方式启用了新的应用程序。第三个轨道,超文本,文化和交流,研究文学机器的创作和接受,从文学小说到创造性非小说和学术论证。随着超文本阅读和写作在社会中变得越来越普遍,链接的修辞继续提供频繁的惊喜和意想不到的机会。今年的论文将对自发形式和短暂的社交媒体的新见解与对精心制作的超媒体的深思熟虑结合起来。社会链接轨道扩展了2007年引入的社会超文本轨道的范围。本专题将关注Web科学中最令人兴奋的最新发展之一——社会注释,通过社会注释,用户可以通过标记、过滤、投票、编辑、分类和评级等协作机制轻松标记其他作者的资源。这些社会过程导致文本、用户、概念、页面、文章和媒体之间出现多种类型的链接。社交链接已经成为今年超文本技术提交的最受欢迎的场所,涵盖了由社交链接驱动的信息系统的设计、分析和建模的几个方面。被接受的论文代表了一个高质量的研究样本,涵盖了广泛的社会联系主题,包括社会、信息和语义网络的共同进化;社会注释的形式模型及其行为模式基于博客和社交网络的链接推断应用程序的搜索、检索、推荐、导航和可扩展性问题;社会诱导语义网络的信息论研究社会信息网络的结构与动态;以及社会联系系统的机制和接口的评估。这是超文本会议第三次在匹兹堡举行。这一次,我们非常幸运地邀请到了来自惠普实验室的Bernardo Huberman和康奈尔大学的Jon Kleinberg教授的精彩主题演讲,以及一个值得期待的优秀技术和社会项目。除了本卷中的贡献之外,超文本2008还提供了两个研讨会:;)网络科学:协作与集体智慧:由Weigang Wang(英国曼彻斯特大学)和David Millard(英国南安普顿大学)组织的从机器中创造:超文本、超媒体和网络艺术家探索工艺(Stephen Ersinghaus(美国康涅狄格州Tunxis社区学院))
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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