DIGITAL CONTENT OF PERIODICALS IN THE ELECTRONIC CATALOGUE OF THE CENTRAL SCIENCE LIBRARY OF THE NAS OF BELARUS

Author(s):  
I. P. Komenda

The publication deals with the initial stages of inclusion into the electronic catalogue of bibliographic records of electronic periodicals from eLIBRARY.RU platform and electronic serials which have been subscribed by the Central Science Library of the NAS of Belarus. The activities on addition of full text documents and tables of contents of periodicals into bibliographic records have been considered.

2007 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 27
Author(s):  
Sam Brooks ◽  
Mark Herrick

Index Blending is the process of database development whereby various components are merged and refined to create a single encompassing source of information. Once a research need is determined for a given area of study, existing resources are examined for value and possible contribution to the end product. Index Blending focuses on the quality of bibliographic records as the primary factor with the addition of full text to enhance the end user’s research experience as an added convenience. Key examples of the process of Index Blending involve the fields of communication and mass media, hospitality and tourism, as well as computers and applied sciences. When academia, vendors, subject experts, lexicographers, and other contributors are brought together through the various factors associated with Index Blending, relevant discipline-specific research may be greatly enhanced.


1991 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 119-131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suliman Al‐Hawamdeh ◽  
Geoff Smith ◽  
Peter Willett
Keyword(s):  

2014 ◽  
Vol 35 (4/5) ◽  
pp. 293-307
Author(s):  
Mark Edward Phillips ◽  
Daniel Gelaw Alemneh ◽  
Brenda Reyes Ayala

Purpose – Increasingly, higher education institutions worldwide are accepting only electronic versions of their students’ theses and dissertations. These electronic theses and dissertations (ETDs) frequently feature embedded URLs in body, footnote and references section of the document. Additionally the web as ETD subject appears to be on an upward trajectory as the web becomes an increasingly important part of everyday life. The paper aims to discuss these issues. Design/methodology/approach – The authors analyzed URL references in 4,335 ETDs in the UNT ETD collection. Links were extracted from the full-text documents, cleaned and canonicalized, deconstructed in the subparts of a URL and then indexed with the full-text indexer Solr. Queries to aggregate and generate overall statistics and trends were generated against the Solr index. The resulting data were analyzed for patterns and trends within a variety of groupings. Findings – ETDs at the University of North Texas that include URL references have increased over the past 14 years from 23 percent in 1999 to 80 percent in 2012. URLs are being included into ETDs in the majority of cases: 62 percent of the publications analyzed in this work contained URLs. Originality/value – This research establishes that web resources are being widely cited in UNT's ETDs and that growth in citing these resources has been observed. Further it provides a preliminary framework for technical methods appropriate for approaching analysis of similar data that may be applicable to other sets of documents or subject areas.


1994 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 67-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
DAVID ELLIS ◽  
JONATHAN FURNER‐HINES ◽  
PETER WILLETT

Author(s):  
Pandu Pratama Putra ◽  
Afriansyah Afriansyah ◽  
Muhammad Syaifullah

Plagiarism is a significant problem in many areas, including universities. plagiarism is usually performed on digital content is to copy-paste of the original document. To anticipate, we need a way to analyze the technique of plagiarism. There are several approaches that can be taken, for example by using a search algorithm Rabin-Karp string because these algorithms can be used to detect plagiarism in a text document. In the testing phase, the test documents used were three documents with similarity level categories of low, medium and high. From some of the testing that has been done, this approach can find the longest quote the same between the two text documents and measure the similarity of text documents. With this system will help prevent acts of plagiarism in the thesis proposal registration so that the absence of the same thesis. Keywords: Plagiarism, Rabin-Karp algorithm, Similarity, Document


2010 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 400-411 ◽  
Author(s):  
Artemy Kolchinsky ◽  
Alaa Abi-Haidar ◽  
Jasleen Kaur ◽  
Ahmed Abdeen Hamed ◽  
Luis M Rocha

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernhard Rieder

This chapter investigates early attempts in information retrieval to tackle the full text of document collections. Underpinning a large number of contemporary applications, from search to sentiment analysis, the concepts and techniques pioneered by Hans Peter Luhn, Gerard Salton, Karen Spärck Jones, and others involve particular framings of language, meaning, and knowledge. They also introduce some of the fundamental mathematical formalisms and methods running through information ordering, preparing the extension to digital objects other than text documents. The chapter discusses the considerable technical expressivity that comes out of the sprawling landscape of research and experimentation that characterizes the early decades of information retrieval. This includes the emergence of the conceptual construct and intermediate data structure that is fundamental to most algorithmic information ordering: the feature vector.


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