- Communities and Knowledge Management
- provides some examples ...
- these relations might be useful; for our purpose, tags could be replaced by snippets or audio files
- maybe useful
- What is digital storytelling? two definitions ...
- CHI '09: Proceedings of the 27th international conference on Human factors in computing systems, page 625--634. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2009)
- CHI '09: Proceedings of the 27th international conference on Human factors in computing systems, page 615--624. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2009)
- SIGIR Forum 40(2):52--60 (2006)
- Journal of Research in Science Teaching 38(3):355--85 (2001)
- Idea Group Publishing, (February 2004)
- WM 2003, Professionelles Wissensmanagement - Erfahrungen und Visionen, Luzern, (2003)
- Proceedings of the ED-MEDIA 2004 World Conference on Educational Multimedia, Hypermedia and Telecommunications, (June 2004)
- Journal of Experimental \& Theoretical Artificial Intelligence 13(4):359--378 (October 2001)
- ICTAI, page 229-230. (1994)
- International Journal of Project Management 21(3):219--228 (2003)
- Journal of Business Strategy 20(2):23--26 (1999)
- MIS quarterly (2001)
- Prentice Hall PTR, Upper Saddle River, NJ, USA, (2000)
- CSCW '90: Proceedings of the 1990 ACM conference on Computer-supported cooperative work, page 143--156. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (1990)
- Decision Support Systems 33(2):143 - 161 (2002)
- Journal of Universal Computer Science 7(7):566-590 (2001)Abstract Recently, the idea of semantic portals on the Web or on the intranet has gained popularity. Their key concern is to allow a community of users to ...Abstract Recently, the idea of semantic portals on the Web or on the intranet has gained popularity. Their key concern is to allow a community of users to present and share knowledge in a particular set of domains via semantic methods. Thus semantic portals aim at creating high-quality access - in contrast to methods like information retrieval or document clustering that do not exploit any semantic background knowledge at all. However, by way of this construction semantic portals may easily suffer from a typical knowledge management problem. Their initial value is low, because only little richly structured knowledge is available. Hence the motivation of its potential users to extend the knowledge pool is small, too. We here present SEAL-II, a methodology for semantic portals that extends its previous version, by providing a range of ontology-based means for hitting the soft spot between unstructured knowledge, which virtually comes for free, but which is of little use, and richly structured knowledge, which is expensive to gain, but of tremendous possible value. Thus, we give the portal builder tools and techniques in an overall framework to start the knowledge process at a semantic portal. SEAL-II takes advantage of the ontology in order to initiate the portal with knowledge, which is more usable than unstructured knowledge, but cheaper than richly structured knowledge.'.
- Journal of Information Science 32(2):198-208 (2006)
- Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Paris, (2007)
- SRMC '08: Proceeding of the 2nd ACM international workshop on Story representation, mechanism and context, page 41--48. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2008)
- Cereb. Cortex (2008)


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