Hello TW,

Following the wonderful hangout on Monday, my mind finds itself
wishing for powerful TW5 features.

One of the reasons I 'tiddle' is that the process of 'tiddling' helps
me think things though. And taking an interest in TW World, following
the conversation of other TW users -- people I perceive as being on a
quest to develop their own thinking tool -- has informed the way I
want to assimilate information and construct my own knowledge base.

I like 'Mario's Model' of knowledge building: Aggregate, Structure,
Refactor. (Its on his TiddlySpace)

I am aggregating information using a google scholar alert. I get
digests sent to me. From being in TiddlyLand I realise that User
Stories are the way to go... here goes..


User Story

As an independent researcher ... i would like all the alerts to be
automatically transformed into tiddlers, each tiddler containing the
abstract which I then could wikify. I would create tiddlylinks from
sections of the abstracts i don't understand. After editing I would
review non-existing links.

In the future, if there were a method more sophisticated than google
scholar, i would like the standard library catagories associated with
each citation to be added to the tiddler, in a similar way to tags


Prior Art

There is a mathematics TW project where you can download an empty TW
with all the standard classification codes for the realm of maths. A
means whereby one could add pre-existing schema (Dublin Core?) to ones
TW which one could use along with vanilla TW tagging or
TagglyTagging....

Obviously a huge task, maybe the task is best done in another way, or
is a futile activity not warranting any further attention.

Alex

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Google Scholar Alerts <[email protected]>
Date: 15 May 2013 22:31
Subject: Scholar Alert - "The structure of scientific revolutions"
To: [email protected]


Scholar Alert: Documents citing "The structure of scientific revolutions"

Scientific communities as autopoietic systems: The reproductive
function of citations

E Riviera - Journal of the American Society for Information Science …, 2013
The increasing employment of bibliometric measures for assessing,
describing, and
mapping science inevitably leads to the increasing need for a citation
theory constituting a
theoretical frame for both citation analysis and the description of
citers' behavior. In this ...

[HTML] Focus: Risks of the Intellectual Life Guest Editor: Cinzia
Ferrini Social Sciences and Humanities Publishing and the Digital
'Revolution'

J Kempf
Abstract This article argues that the digital 'revolution'may turn out
to be a true revolution for
humanities and social sciences scholars, but not for the reasons
usually brought forth in
academic debates. Digital humanities is a way of returning to the
intellectual fundamentals ...

Tuning the Mind: Connecting Aesthetics to Cognitive Science

R HaCohen, R Katz
Starting from the late Renaissance, efforts to make vocal music more
expressive heightened
the power of words, which, in turn, gave birth to the modern semantics
of musical
expression. As the skepticism of seventeenth-century science divorced
the acoustic ...

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