This Science News Wire page contains a press release issued by an organization and is provided to you "as is" with little or no review from Science X staff.

Pensoft's ARPHA teams with Hypothesis to encourage scientific discourse through annotation

March 1st, 2018
Pensoft's ARPHA teams with Hypothesis to encourage scientific discourse through annotation
Thhis is an example of annotating an article in RIO Journal (published on ARPHA). Credit: RIO Journal and ARPHA

In a new integration, the Pensoft-developed innovative journal publishing platform ARPHA teams up with nonprofit, open-source annotation technology provider Hypothesis to further enable academic discussion and foster collaboration in the spirit of open science practices.

This partnership makes Pensoft the second publisher to implement this technology across its whole journal portfolio.

Current and future scholarly journals using ARPHA, including Research Ideas and Outcomes (RIO Journal), ZooKeys, One Ecosystem, Journal of Hymenoptera Research and others, will have a new layer added to their content, so that anyone registered with Hypothesis will be able to add public sentence-level annotations within any publication and use it as a starting point for further discussions. All annotations are stored at Hypothesis and listed in the user's account.

Upon opening an article published in any ARPHA journal, website visitors can now spot a dialog-box icon in the top-right of the screen showing the number of submitted annotations, which he/she can reply to at the click of a button. Annotations appear highlighted within the webpage whenever a user is logged into their account on Hypothesis.

Alternatively, the user can simply select some text and add a note to share his/her own idea, feedback, opinion or question inspired by the publication. Thus, the content of the research paper becomes alive, while readers could contribute to the study's discourse.

Pensoft's ARPHA teams with Hypothesis to encourage scientific discourse through annotation
These are logos of partners Hypothesis and ARPHA. Credit: Hypothesis and ARPHA

"I am delighted to see ARPHA partnering with Hypothesis not only because this benefits our users and journals, but because it also works for the good of science and academia in general," comments Pensoft's and ARPHA's founder and CEO Prof. Lyubomir Penev.

"What we've learned from implementing Open Science more and more vigorously in research practices is that striving for transparency and easier collaboration only stimulates scientific progress," he adds. "One way to do this is definitely by providing the right platforms for giving and addressing feedback."

Dan Whaley, CEO at Hypothesis, adds: "We're excited to see annotation brought to the many publications on the ARPHA platform. As an early member of the Annotating All Knowledge Coalition with a strong commitment to open research and transparent data, Pensoft shares Hypothesis' commitment to facilitating conversations around scholarly content and improving researcher workflow. We look forward to working with the journal editors to integrate annotation into existing workflows to maximize the success of this initiative."

For a better grasp of the Web Annotation Architecture, as seen by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), see their interactive infographic.

Provided by Pensoft Publishers

Citation: Pensoft's ARPHA teams with Hypothesis to encourage scientific discourse through annotation (2018, March 1) retrieved 23 September 2025 from https://sciencex.com/wire-news/281329481/pensofts-arpha-teams-with-hypothesis-to-encourage-scientific-dis.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.