39 Matching Annotations
  1. Mar 2026
    1. Mary E Sesto, Curtis B Irwin, Karen B Chen, Amrish O Chourasia, and Douglas A Wiegmann. 2012. Effect of touch screen button size and spacing on touch characteristics of users with and without disabilities. Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society 54, 3 (2012), 425–436.

      any bibliographic entry relating to older adults

    2. Zhao Xia Jin, Tom Plocher, and Liana Kiff. 2007. Touch screen user interfaces for older adults: button size and spacing. In Universal acess in human computer interaction. coping with diversity. Springer, 933–941.

      any bibliographic entry relating to older adults

    3. Robin Brewer, Raymundo Cornejo Garcia, Tedmond Schwaba, Darren Gergle, and Anne Marie Piper. 2016. Exploring Traditional Phones as an E-Mail Interface for Older Adults. ACM Transactions on Accessible Computing (TACCESS) 8, 2 (2016), 6.

      any bibliographic entry relating to older adults

    4. Kerryellen G Vroman, Sajay Arthanat, and Catherine Lysack. 2015. "Who over 65 is online?" Older adults' dispositions toward information communication technology. Computers in Human Behavior 43 (2015), 156–166.

      any bibliographic entry relating to older adults

    5. Karen Renaud and Judy Van Biljon. 2008. Predicting technology acceptance and adoption by the elderly: a qualitative study. In Proceedings of the 2008 annual research conference of the South African Institute of Computer Scientists and Information Technologists on IT research in developing countries: riding the wave of technology. ACM, 210–219.

      any bibliographic entry relating to older adults

    6. Chee Wei Phang, Juliana Sutanto, Atreyi Kankanhalli, Yan Li, Bernard CY Tan, and Hock-Hai Teo. 2006. Senior citizens' acceptance of information systems: A study in the context of e-government services. Engineering Management, IEEE Transactions on 53, 4 (2006), 555–569.

      any bibliographic entry relating to older adults

    7. Bjorn Niehaves and Ralf Plattfaut. 2014. Internet adoption by the elderly: employing IS technology acceptance theories for understanding the age-related digital divide. European Journal of Information Systems 23, 6 (2014), 708–726.

      any bibliographic entry relating to older adults

    8. Tracy L Mitzner, Wendy A Rogers, Arthur D Fisk, Walter R Boot, Neil Charness, Sara J Czaja, and Joseph Sharit. 2014. Predicting older adults' perceptions about a computer system designed for seniors. Universal Access in the Information Society (2014), 1–10.

      any bibliographic entry relating to older adults

    9. Chaiwoo Lee and Joseph F Coughlin. 2014. PERSPECTIVE: Older Adults' Adoption of Technology: An Integrated Approach to Identifying Determinants and Barriers. Journal of Product Innovation Management (2014).

      any bibliographic entry relating to older adults

    10. Nancy M Gell, Dori E Rosenberg, George Demiris, Andrea Z LaCroix, and Kushang V Patel. 2013. Patterns of technology use among older adults with and without disabilities. The Gerontologist (2013), gnt166.

      any bibliographic entry relating to older adults

    11. Helene Gelderblom, Tobie van Dyk, and Judy van Biljon. 2010. Mobile phone adoption: Do existing models adequately capture the actual usage of older adults?. In Proceedings of the 2010 annual research conference of the south african institute of computer scientists and information technologists. ACM, 67–74.

      any bibliographic entry relating to older adults

    12. Anna Dickinson, Alan F Newell, Michael J Smith, and Robin L Hill. 2005. Introducing the Internet to the over-60s: Developing an email system for older novice computer users. Interacting with Computers 17, 6 (2005), 621–642.

      any bibliographic entry relating to older adults

    13. Luca Buccoliero and Elena Bellio. 2014. The adoption of silver e-Health technologies: first hints on technology acceptance factors for elderly in Italy. In Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Theory and Practice of Electronic Governance. ACM, 304–307.

      any bibliographic entry relating to older adults

  2. Oct 2024
    1. When I read a book, forexample, I proceed as follows: I always have a piece of note paper at hand onwhich I write down certain ideas for specific pages. On the back, I write down thebibliographic information. When I have read through the book, I go through thesenotes and think about what can be evaluated for which notes that have alreadybeen written and how. So I always read with an eye to the possibility of writingnotes to the books. Maybe it is simply a collecting instinct I have.
  3. Aug 2024
    1. When switching, do this only at the end of a chapter, not in media res (in the middle of action).

      Also summarize the last thing that happened/got explained for an easy refresher the next time you get back.

      Bib-Card? Potentially Marginaelia? Feeling more like a dedicated notebook for this. Need to work out.

      Vashik does this summary of a chapter on index cards... Useful to do in a Zettelkasten, or too much effort?

    1. Doesn't this method of bib-card IDs get cumbersome to write? I simply use the author's last name... In the case of Adler it would be "Adler/1" and "Adler/1(b)" for the bib-card... Referencing the source on a main note would be "Adler, page number" If I then read another source by Adler, for example "Intellect: Mind over Matter" which I plan to read, it would be "Adler1/1", "Adler1/1(b)" and "Adler1, page number" Seems much easier to remember for me, and also more readable.
    2. Kathleen Spracklen keeps an index specific to the bibliography, detailing all the works in the bib-box. This is quite useful, and an index card is not too big to need alphabetical sorting, which would be cumbersome on paper.

      I will adopt this practice most likely.

      The additional benefit is that you can see which bib-card IDs you have already used, preventing duplicate entries.

  4. Jun 2024
  5. May 2023
    1. In the Pandoc Plugin settings, add — citeproc to the ‘Extra Pandoc arguments’ setting. This will be what takes the markdown citations and converts them to in-text citations in the conversion process. It also inserts a full reference list on the end of your document automatically, all completely formatted. To get this to work, you have to specify the location of the .bib file on your system by adding the path, in quotations, to a ‘bibliography’ YAML property.
  6. Jan 2023
    1. Interested in seeing what others’ reference/bib notes look like .t3_10m3abl._2FCtq-QzlfuN-SwVMUZMM3 { --postTitle-VisitedLinkColor: #9b9b9b; --postTitleLink-VisitedLinkColor: #9b9b9b; --postBodyLink-VisitedLinkColor: #989898; } share + showcaseNothing more than that, just curious how other people structure/write their reference/bib notecards

      reply to u/m_t_rv_s__n at https://www.reddit.com/r/Zettelkasten/comments/10m3abl/interested_in_seeing_what_others_referencebib/

      An example of my digital "bib notes" for: Sayers, Dorothy L. The Lost Tools of Learning. E. T. Heron, 1948.

      https://hypothes.is/users/chrisaldrich?q=url%3Aurn%3Ax-pdf%3A13447fd092edd947b775ba269de28ee6


      There are some other good anecdotal examples here too.

  7. Dec 2022
  8. Aug 2022
  9. Jun 2022
  10. Jul 2015