93 | -- | 0 | Ana Baptista, Peter Linde, Niklas Lavesson, Miguel A. Brito. Preface |
101 | -- | 109 | Elizabeth Roxana Mass Araya, Silvana Aparecida Borsetti Gregório Vidotti. Creative commons: A convergence model between the ideal of commons and the possibilities of creation in contemporary times, opposed to copyright impediments |
111 | -- | 119 | Lydia Chalabi, Madjid Dahmane. Open access in developing countries: African open archives |
121 | -- | 129 | Flavia Bastos, Silvana Vidotti, Nanci Oddone. The University and its libraries: Reactions and resistance to scientific publishers |
131 | -- | 138 | Anabela Serrano. Information retrieval educational goals in library and information science and in health sciences |
139 | -- | 146 | Celeste Martin, Jonathan Aitken. Evolving definitions of authorship in Ebook design |
147 | -- | 155 | Maria José Vicentini Jorente. Archives information publishing new design in post-custodial regime: The National Archives Experience Digital Vaults |
157 | -- | 166 | Maria Nisheva-Pavlova, Pavel Pavlov. Ontology-based search and document retrieval in a digital library with folk songs |
167 | -- | 176 | Carlos Henrique Marcondes. Knowledge network of scientific claims derived from a semantic publication system |
177 | -- | 187 | José João Almeida, Nuno Ramos Carvalho, José Nuno Oliveira. WIKI: : SCORE A collaborative environment for music transcription and publishing |
189 | -- | 197 | Ana Catarina Silva, Maria Manuel Borges. Book design program: A transition to a hybrid publishing context |
199 | -- | 208 | Martin Hecher, Robert Möstl, Eva Eggeling, Christian Derler, Dieter W. Fellner. "Tangible Culture" - Designing virtual exhibitions on multi-touch devices |
211 | -- | 214 | Rory McGreal, Nian-Shing Chen, Tim McNamara. A comparison of an open access university press with traditional presses: Two years later |
215 | -- | 223 | Graham Stone. Huddersfield Open Access Publishing |
225 | -- | 233 | Pierre Mounier. Freemium as a sustainable economic model for open access electronic publishing in humanities and social sciences |
235 | -- | 241 | Maria Cristina Guardado, Maria Manuel Borges. Some trends in electronic publication and open access in Portuguese history journals |
243 | -- | 248 | Anita Eppelin, Richarda Böttcher. Development of a publishing framework for living open access textbooks |
249 | -- | 258 | Caren Milloy, Graham Stone, Ellen Collins. OAPEN-UK: An open access business model for scholarly monographs in the humanities and social sciences |
259 | -- | 269 | Peter Linde, Jörgen Eriksson, Lars Kullman, Margareta Fathli, Klemens Karlsson, Marjatta Sikström, Ylva Sköld, Ingela Tång. Accessibility and self-archiving of conference articles: A study on a selection of Swedish institutional repositories |
271 | -- | 279 | Chrysoula Gatsou, Anastasios Politis, Dimitrios Zevgolis. Text vs visual metaphor in mobile interfaces for novice user interaction |
281 | -- | 291 | Irem Soydal, Gülten Alir, Yurdagül Ünal. Are Turkish universities ready for e-learning: A case of Hacettepe University Faculty of Letters |
293 | -- | 299 | Jelle Gerbrandy, Els Kloek. The Biographical Portal of the Netherlands: Experiences in collecting and curating data from the web and elsewhere |
301 | -- | 310 | Dora Santos Silva. The future of digital magazine publishing |