Un peu de veille en sciences de l'information et de la documentation
| par Fabrizio Tinti |







Billets_récents

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Sur la liseuse (1)
Sur la liseuse (2)
Sur la platine
The Eternal (Sonic Youth)
The Dead Weather [vidéo]
Fresh Blood (Eels)
For What It's Worth (Placebo)
Dark Night Of The Soul
Die Slow (Health)


« Information literacy (07/04/08) | Page d'accueil | Gestion des identités: tendances »

lundi, 07 avril 2008

Sur le front du libre (07/04/08)

- Perspective on Open-Access Publishing: An Interview with Peter Suber
(source: Innovate, vol. 4, n° 4, avr.-mai 2008)

- Das, Anup Kumar (2008) Open Access to Knowledge and Information: Scholarly Literature and Digital Library Initiatives – the South Asian Scenario. Sen, B K and Josiah, Jocelyne, Eds. UNESCO, New Delhi.
(source: DList, 04/04/08)
The South Asia sub-region is now in the forefront of the Open Access movement within developing countries in the world, with India being the most prominent partner in terms of its successful Open Access and Digital Library initiatives. Institutional and policy frameworks in India also facilitate innovative solutions for increasing international visibility and accessibility of scholarly literature and documentary heritage in this country. This publication has its genesis in the recommendations and proceedings of UNESCO-supported international conferences and workshops including the 4th International Conference of Asian Digital Libraries (ICADL2001, Bangalore); the International Conferences on Digital Libraries (ICDL2004 & ICDL2006, New Delhi); and the International Workshop on Greenstone Digital Library Software (2006, Kozhikode), where many information professionals of this sub-region demonstrated their Digital Library and Open Access initiatives. This book describes successful digital library and open access initiatives in the South Asia sub-region that are available in the forms of open courseware, open access journals, metadata harvesting services, national-level open access repositories and institutional repositories. This book may be considered an authoritative Source-book on Open Access development in this sub-region.

- Jordan, Mark (2008) Increasing access to OA material through metadata aggregation, University of British Columbia School of Library, Archival and Information Studies (SLAIS). Presentation.
(source: E-LIST, 03/04/08)

- Open Text Mining Interface (OTMI)
The Open Text Mining Interface (OTMI) is an initiative from Nature Publishing Group (NPG). It aims to enable scholarly publishers, among others, to disclose their full text for indexing and text-mining purposes but without giving it away in a form that is readily human-readable. It provides for a range of structured disclosure options, from word vectors (lists of word occurrences with frequency counts) and the presentation of text 'snippets' out of narrative order, to the presentation of full text in 'raw' or 'reduced' form.

- Reactions to the NIH policy
(source: Caveat Lector, 07/04/08)

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