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Small Scale Retrodigitization

Doob, Michael (2008)

Towards Digital Mathematics Library. Birmingham, United Kingdom, July 27th, 2008

The digitization of papers born in the print-only era is vital for the health of the mathematical record. Many large scale retrodigitization projects are underway and, at this point, probably more that half of the mathematical history has been finished. Many smaller journals and books remain to be done. This paper gives a framework within which these may also be completed. It uses the digitization of the Canadian Journal of Mathematics (53,000 pages), completed as a one-man project over a few months,...

Some Thoughts on the Near-Future Digital Mathematics Library

Bouche, Thierry (2008)

Towards Digital Mathematics Library. Birmingham, United Kingdom, July 27th, 2008

The mathematicians’ Digital mathematics library (DML) summarises the generous project that all mathematics ever published should end up in digital form so that it would be more easily referenced, accessed, used. This concept was formulated at the very beginning of this century, and yielded a lot of international activity that culminated around years 2002–2005. While it is estimated that a substantial part of the existing math literature is already available in some digital format, nothing looking...

Special issue: WUPES’12

Jiřina Vejnarová, Václav Kratochvíl (2014)

Kybernetika

This special issue of the Kybernetika Journal arose from the 9th workshop on uncertainty processing, WUPES’12, held in Mariánské Lázně, Czech Republic, in September 2012. In the selection process for this special issue, we tried to capture the rich variety of the presented methodological approaches. The quality of the selected papers was judged by reviewers in accord with the usual practice of Kybernetika. After a careful selection, 7 papers were included in the special issue. There are, however,...

Symbol Declarations in Mathematical Writing

Wolska, Magdalena, Grigore, Mihai (2010)

Towards a Digital Mathematics Library. Paris, France, July 7-8th, 2010

We present three corpus-based studies on symbol declaration in mathematical writing. We focus on simple object denoting symbols which may be part of larger expressions. We look into whether the symbols are explicitly introduced into the discourse and whether the information on once interpreted symbols can be used to interpret structurally related symbols. Our goal is to support fine-grained semantic interpretation of simple and complex mathematical expressions. The results of our analysis empirically...

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