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Journal ArticleDOI

The BLEND System: Programme for the Study of Some "Electronic Journals.".

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TLDR
The aims are to assess the cost, efficiency, and subjective impact of such a system, and to explore and evaluate alternative forms of user communication through an electronic journal and information network.
Abstract
This article describes a three-year experimental programme organised jointly by the two Universities as the Birmingham and Loughborough Electronic Network Development (BLEND). The aims are to assess the cost, efficiency, and subjective impact of such a system, and to explore and evaluate alternative forms of user communication through an electronic journal and information network. Using a host computer at Birmingham University, a community of initially about 50 scientists (the Loughborough Information Network Community—LINC) will be connected through the public telephone network to explore various types of electronic journal. The concept of the electronic journal involves using a computer to aid the normal procedures whereby an article is written, refereed, accepted, and “published.” The subject of this experimental programme will be “Computer Human Factors.” Each member will contribute at least one research article and one shorter note in each year of the project, and will also use other forms of communication such as newsletter, annotated abstracts, workshop conferences, cooperative authorship, etc. Throughout the project relevant data will be gathered to enable the assessment of system and user performance, cost, usefulness, and acceptability.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Scholarly communication and electronic journals: an impact study

TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the impact of ejournals on the scholarly communities they serve and found that, with a few possible exceptions, the impact thus far of eJournals on scholarly communication has been minimal.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Electronic Archive: Scientific Publishing for the 1990s

TL;DR: It is argued that the primary advantage of electronic publishing is not the inexpensive delivery of text, but the use of a centralized archive to concentrate resources for discovering and utilizing information.
Journal ArticleDOI

Designing Electronic Text: The Role of Print-Based Research

TL;DR: The 14th ERIC/ECTJ Annual Review Paper as discussed by the authors was published by the National Institute of Education (NIE), U.S. Department of Education and was supported by the ERIC (Educational Resources Information Center) Clearinghouse on Information Resources, Syracuse University.
Book

CSCW in Practice: an Introduction and Case Studies

Dan Diaper, +1 more
TL;DR: This chapter discusses CSCW: Imposition of Common Methods of Working or Facilitation of Cooperative Working, which aims to provide a case study in Collaborative Writing and its implications for the HICOM environment.
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