Research Papers

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Research on trust

Friday, August 27th, 2010

A couple of papers on trust and cooperation, both in Cognitive Science.
The first one isn’t directly about trust, but more about learning how to cooperate when there are minimal social cues available, was written by Andrew M. Colman, Briony D. Pulford, David Omtzigt and Ali al-Nowaihi, and is entitled Learning to cooperate without awareness […]

Do violent games influence young people to be violent?

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

If you love a good old-fashioned statistical brawl, head on over to your university library and pick up a copy of March’s issue of Psychological Bulletin (that’s volume 136, issue 2, for those of you who prefer numbers to months).
First up: Violent video game effects on aggression, empathy, and prosocial behavior in Eastern and […]

Our paper on TellTable published in OSBR.ca

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

Collaborative Work Using Single User Applications, by Andy Adler, John C. Nash and Sylvie Noël, is our latest paper on TellTable. It’s available at the Open Source Business Resource (OSBR.ca), in the July 2009 issue, and the paper is available as a PDF or in HTML format.
Many work environments require collaborative writing and editing of […]

Scholarly paper on Open Access science

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

In case you are looking for a paper giving an overview of the history of scientific publications, you may be interested in this one by Kaiser Nikham and Rajendra Babu H., Moving from script to science 2.0 for scholarly communication, Webology, vol. 6, no. 1, March 2009.
This study attempts to trace the evolution of scholarly […]

Opening up access to research papers

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

It annoys me greatly that although I am all for open source in science, I have not been very good at offering up my own research papers to the world. A small part of that is just sheer laziness, but a bigger part is that I worry about the copyright issues. Journals in particular are […]

Scientometric analysis of the CHI proceedings

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

Christoph Bartneck and Jun Hu presented a paper at CHI 2009 on who has been participating at CHI:
The CHI conference has grown rapidly over the last 26 years. We present a quantitative analysis on the countries and organizations that contribute to its success. Only 7.8 percent of the countries are responsible for 80 percent of […]

What scientists need are ghost writers

Monday, March 30th, 2009

Every day, I am grateful to my parents for having made it possible for my brother and me to learn both French and English at an early age. Thus I was lucky enough to have learned at a young age the primary language in which science is published, a huge advantage for my career choice.
I […]

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