Full text of Proceedings of the Journal Article Tag Suite Conference 2010 is part of the NCBI Bookshelf.
Monday, November 1, 2010
Are We there Yet? An introduction to the first Journal Article Tag Suite Conference……….Jeff Beck.
NLM Journal Publishing DTD Flexibility: How and Why Applications of the NLM DTD Vary Based on Publisher-Specific Requirements……….Bruce Rosenblum.
Journals and Magazines and Books, Oh My! A Look at ACS' Use of NLM Tagsets……….Dan O'Brien and Jeff Fisher.
Fitting the Journal Publishing 3.0 Preview Stylesheets to Your Needs: Capabilities and Customizations……….Wendell Piez.
JATS to EPUB: Unraveling the Mystery……….Laura Kelly.
eXtyles, Typefi, and the NLM Journal Publishing DTD……….Louise R. Adam and Chandi Perera.
Adopting the Journal Archiving and Interchange Tag Set to Build a Shared E-Journal Archive for Ontario……….Wei Zhao and Vidhya Arvind.
Portico: A Case Study in the Use of the Journal Archiving and Interchange Tag Set for the Long Term Preservation of Scholarly Journals……….Sheila M. Morrissey, John
Meyer, Sushil Bhattarai, Sachin Kurdikar, Jie Ling, Matthew Stoeffler, and Umadevi Thanneeru.
Tuesday November 2, 2010
TaxPub: An Extension of the NLM/NCBI Journal Publishing DTD for Taxonomic Descriptions……….Terry Catapano.
Accessible publishing using the Journal Article Tag Suite……….Melanie Lauckner and Chandi Perera.
Bookshelf: Leafing through XML……….Martin Latterner and Marilu Hoeppner.
Why Create a Subset of a Public Tag Set……….Deborah Aleyne Lapeyre.
Superset Me—Not: Why the Journal Publishing Tag Set Is Sufficient if You Use Appropriate Layer Validation……….Alexander B. Schwarzman.
The Evolving Information Ecostructure of Publishing……….Evan Owens.
The National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) of the National Library of Medicine (NLM) created the Journal Archiving and Interchange Tag Suite with the intent of providing a common format in which publishers and archives can exchange journal content. The Suite provides a set of XML schema modules that define elements and attributes for describing the textual and graphical content of journal articles as well as some non-article material such as letters, editorials, and book and product reviews.