Annotated bibliography. A type of document common in Humanities subjects. It comprises a collection of discrete annotated references, with opening and closing text. The exact styling of the references and the nature of the annotation(s) vary by domain
Annotated reference. The primary component(s) of an annotated biography. The component contains two parts. The first part is a styled reference. The second part is a free-text reflection on the reference. The styling if the reference and the nature of the annotation will vary by domain.
Citation. A citation is either a direct quote from a source or an in-text mention of a source. In academic style writing, a citation includes a codified mention of a Reference which is normally stored in a discrete bibliography (of references). Though different in close meaning ‘citation’ and ‘reference’ are often used interchangeably, the meaning being inferred from context.
Reference. A reference describes the source of a citation. Its purpose is to assert the provenance of a citation’s source, giving sufficient information for the reader to locate the original or a copy of it. Traditionally, reference information is styled differently according to the style of the publisher. Reference information can be stored as discrete data (e.g. Author, title, etc.) but there is no agreed standard. The BibTeX format developed for LaTeX use is the closest there is to a standard. Though different in close meaning ‘citation’ and ‘reference’ are often used interchangeably, the meaning being inferred from context.
Structured Highlighting. Highlighting text or other items in a way the system can know what it is.
Un-Structured Highlighting. Highlighting by ‘drawing’ freehand without the system knowing what was highlighted.
View & ViewSpec (in XR). … to be defined.