Monkey Business—or What is an Edition? Ore, E. S. (2004). Monkey Business—or What is an Edition?. Literary and Linguistic Computing. 19, 35–44.
Digital Editions for Corpus Linguistics: Representing manuscript reality in electronic corpora Honkapohja, A., Kaislaniemi S., & Marttila V. (2009). Digital Editions for Corpus Linguistics: Representing manuscript reality in electronic corpora. Language and Computers. 68, 451–475.
Electronic Scholarly Editions Price, K. M. (2013). Electronic Scholarly Editions. (Siemens, R., & Schreibman S., Ed.).A Companion to Digital Literary Studies. 434–450.
Digital editions as a new model of conceptual authority data Tomasi, F. (2013). Digital editions as a new model of conceptual authority data. {JLIS}.it. 4, 21–44.
New models for collaborative textual scholarship Hedges, M.., Jordanous A.., Dunn S., Roueche C.., Kuster M.W.., Selig T.., et al. (2012). New models for collaborative textual scholarship. 2012 6th IEEE International Conference on Digital Ecosystems Technologies (DEST). 1–6.
Building a Community of Readers: Social Reading and an Aggregated {eBook} Reading App for Libraries Cook, J. Ellis, & Cook K. (2013). Building a Community of Readers: Social Reading and an Aggregated {eBook} Reading App for Libraries. In the Library with the Lead Pipe.
From Text to Work: Digital Tools and the Emergence of the Social Text McGann, J. (2006). From Text to Work: Digital Tools and the Emergence of the Social Text. Text. 16, 49–62.
Trusting the Electronic Edition Flanders, J. (1997). Trusting the Electronic Edition. Computers and the Humanities. 31, 301–310.
New Technology and New Roles: The Need for "Corpus Editors" Crane, G., & Rydberg-Cox J. A. (2000). New Technology and New Roles: The Need for "Corpus Editors". Proceedings of the Fifth {ACM} Conference on Digital Libraries. 252–253.