Web users have changed the Web from a means for publishing and exchanging documents to a means for sharing their feelings, beliefs, and opinions and participating in debates on any conceivable topic. Current web technologies fail to support this change: arguments and opinions are uploaded in purely textual form; as a result, they cannot be easily retrieved, processed and interlinked, and all this information is largely left unexploited. This talk will sketch the vision of Debate Web, which will enable the extraction, discovery, retrieval, interrelation and visualisation of the vast variety of viewpoints that exist online, based on machine-readable representations of arguments and opinions
Abstract: In a previous article appeared in this journal, I1 introduced Bruno Latour’s cartography o...
The ability to understand, process and evaluate arguments made by others and ourselves is important ...
Argument mapping technologies have been historically proposed in Computer Supported Cooperative Work...
Part 3: Engaging Citizens OnlineInternational audienceOne of the Web’s most phenomenal impacts has b...
Governments around the world are increasingly utilising online platforms and social media to engage ...
Social media are increasingly used to support online debate and facilitate citizens’ engagement in p...
Debate sites in social media provide a unified platform for citizens to discuss controversial questi...
Debating technologies, a newly emerging strand of research into computational technologies to suppor...
Abstract. With the World Wide Web firmly in place as the prime source of human knowledge, its conten...
Purpose: In this paper the aim is to present Debate Dashboard, an online collaborative platform desi...
Debating Technologies, a newly emerging strand of research into computational technologies to suppor...
Discussion forums have been used since the beginning of the mainstream internet and changed relative...
In a previous article appeared in this journal, I introduced Bruno Latour's cartography of controver...
This work suggests a fine-grained min-ing of contentious documents, specifically online debates, tow...
Web 2.0 technologies, such as forums and wikis, are enabling an explosion of global knowl- edge shar...
Abstract: In a previous article appeared in this journal, I1 introduced Bruno Latour’s cartography o...
The ability to understand, process and evaluate arguments made by others and ourselves is important ...
Argument mapping technologies have been historically proposed in Computer Supported Cooperative Work...
Part 3: Engaging Citizens OnlineInternational audienceOne of the Web’s most phenomenal impacts has b...
Governments around the world are increasingly utilising online platforms and social media to engage ...
Social media are increasingly used to support online debate and facilitate citizens’ engagement in p...
Debate sites in social media provide a unified platform for citizens to discuss controversial questi...
Debating technologies, a newly emerging strand of research into computational technologies to suppor...
Abstract. With the World Wide Web firmly in place as the prime source of human knowledge, its conten...
Purpose: In this paper the aim is to present Debate Dashboard, an online collaborative platform desi...
Debating Technologies, a newly emerging strand of research into computational technologies to suppor...
Discussion forums have been used since the beginning of the mainstream internet and changed relative...
In a previous article appeared in this journal, I introduced Bruno Latour's cartography of controver...
This work suggests a fine-grained min-ing of contentious documents, specifically online debates, tow...
Web 2.0 technologies, such as forums and wikis, are enabling an explosion of global knowl- edge shar...
Abstract: In a previous article appeared in this journal, I1 introduced Bruno Latour’s cartography o...
The ability to understand, process and evaluate arguments made by others and ourselves is important ...
Argument mapping technologies have been historically proposed in Computer Supported Cooperative Work...