- Scholarpedia
"Scholarpedia" is an English-language online
wiki -basedencyclopedia in which articles are written by invited expert authors and are subject topeer review . [cite web |url=http://applied-neuroscience.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=79 |title=Scholarpedia: the free peer-reviewed encyclopedia |publisher=Society of Applied Neuroscience |date=11 November 2006 |accessdate=2007-03-27] The articles are available online without charge for non-commercial use, but may not be copied in bulk. Authors are given credit on the article page.Only registered users can edit an article, and those edits are subject to approval by the "curator" of the article, who is typically the author. Users have a "scholar index" attribute which is incremented or decremented by various activities and which controls what capabilities the user has. The web site uses the
MediaWiki software which is also used byWikipedia .Scholarpedia is at this time not a general encyclopedia; it currently focuses on the fields of
computational neuroscience ,dynamical system s,computational intelligence , andastrophysics . [cite web |url=http://mitpress.typepad.com/mitpresslog/2007/01/scholarpedia.html |title=Scholarpedia |date= January 08, 2007 |accessdate=2007-03-27 |publisher=TheMIT Presslog]The project was created in February 2006 by Eugene M. Izhikevich, a researcher at the
Neurosciences Institute ,San Diego, California .Scholarpedia conducts [http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Special:ElectionForum election of authors] for various articles to identify the original inventors/discoverers. For example,
Jimmy Wales andLarry Sanger were nominated for the [http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Wikipedia article on Wikipedia] .Copyright and patents
Contributors retain copyright on articles submitted to Scholarpedia, and agree that Scholarpedia has the unlimited right to reproduce their submissions. This approach has been criticised by Brian Mingus of the
University of Colorado at Boulder , who has suggested that theGNU Free Documentation License is more appropriate for a volunteer project, and would allow text to be incorporated to and from other projects such as Wikipedia. Mingus also criticised the application for a patent on the Scholarpedia methodology, noting that the system was built on theMediaWiki software, which is licensed under theGPL , and that the modifications could be released as open source software rather than being kept closed. [cite web |url=http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Talk:Main_Page#Comments_on_copyright_and_patents |title= Comments on copyright and patents |date= April 29, 2007 |accessdate=2007-08-23 |publisher=Scholarpedia]Scholarpedia have responded, saying that it is important that only they can reproduce contributed text as it gives original authors control over use of their contributions, and that the right to reproduce assigned to Scholarpedia means that the rights can be licensed to publishers, like
MIT Press and Springer, to produce printed versions of Scholarpedia.Fact|date=December 2007ee also
*
Wikipedia
*Citizendium
*List of online encyclopedias References
External links
* [http://www.scholarpedia.org/ Scholarpedia]
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