| D. Jones. The hypertext bibliography project. http://theory.lcs.mit.edu/~dmjones/hbp/. |
....databases like INSPEC. There are sites that maintain links for speci c subject areas [3, 5, 7] as well as sites that maintain information about conference announcements and deadlines [24, 7, 13] In addition, there are paper and bibliography databases like the Hypertext Bibliography Project [14], the Computing Research Repository [17] and the Computer Science Research Paper Search Engine [19] Searching for relevant material however is still a time consuming task, given the volume of information available and the lack of contextual precision of most general purpose search engines. A ....
....below: 1. Bibliographies: The DBLP [18] site at the Universit at Trier maintains a vast collection of bibliographies for a variety of topics. David Eppstein [6] maintains a number of bibliographies for geometry related topics. There are also sites that maintain conference speci c bibliographies [14]. 2. Books: Links to relevant books in the area can be provided. For example, the section on Randomized Algorithms could provide a link to the book by Motwani and Raghavan [21] 3. Survey articles: In many areas, there are excellent survey articles available from author home pages or from ....
D. Jones. The hypertext bibliography project. http://theory.lcs.mit.edu/~dmjones/hbp/.
....rst quarter of 2001. Comparing BoW with related projects, all in Computer Science, leads to the following di erences. The ACM [3] and IEEE CS [16] digital libraries are operated by publishers, and therefore limited in scope according to source rather than topic. The Hypertext Bibliography Project [17] spans multiple publishers, but still does not support literature from arbitrary sources (including gray) Its use of the net is limited to live citation links among papers. The WEBBIB project [31] is similar in this respect. CiteSeer [25] provides rather comprehensive citation indexing and ....
D. M. Jones, \The hypertext bibliography project". URL http://theory.lcs.mit.edu/~dmjones/hbp/.
....either mathematical or biographical. The data come mainly from the bibliography in this present volume and records kept by Mathematical Reviews (MR) 13] Additional useful sources of information include The Hypertext Bibliography Project (a database of articles in theoretical computer science) [11], Zentralblatt [16] the Jahrbuch [10] various necrological articles too numerous list, and personal communications. Previous articles on these topics can be found in [3,4,7,8,14] Paul has certainly become a legend, whose fame (as well as his genius and eccentricity) has spread beyond the ....
David M. Jones, The hypertext bibliography project, World Wide Web: http://theory.lcs.mit.edu/%7Edmjones/hbp/
....written according to the citations among them. He discusses a distributed approach using di#erent servers for di#erent sources such as journals, conferences, etc. He proposes to form a consortium of universities, academic societies, and library associations to establish such a system. D. M. Jones [Jon95] has originated the Hypertext Bibliography Project. A Web based system employs hypertext links to establish citations, and sets up one Web page per document containing a list of links to papers that cite it. This project is already well under way. It covers a selection of major journals and ....
D.M. Jones. The hypertext bibliography project. URL http://theory.lcs.mit.edu/#dmjones/hbp/info.html, 1995.
.... is based on an automatic tool that crawls the Web looking for scientific papers, analyzes them, and creates a citation index from them [25] This results in a useful on line citation index, including automatically finding related papers [10] A related example is the hypertext bibliography project [21]. This project contains information about all papers published in a host of journals and conferences, mainly related to theoretical computer science, and maintains two way links among these papers according to their citations. Thus it is essentially a version of the science citation index where ....
D. M. Jones, "The hypertext bibliography project". URL http://theory.lcs.mit.edu/~dmjones/hbp/.
Online articles have much greater impact More about CiteSeer.IST Add search form to your site Submit documents Feedback
CiteSeer.IST - Copyright Penn State and NEC