Difference between revisions of "Talk:MitoPedia"
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::::* [MitoPedia concept::Find] | |||
:::::Β» [[MitoPedia:_Respiratory_states#Respiratory_states:_find_synonyms.2C_historically_used_and_controversial_terms |Respiratory states: find synonyms, historically used and controversial terms]] | |||
:::::Β» [[SUIT_protocol_library#List_of_SUIT_protocols_with_D-numbers]] | |||
[[Image:BB-Bioblast.jpg|left|40px|link=http://www.bioblast.at/index.php/Bioblast:About|Bioblast wiki]] | [[Image:BB-Bioblast.jpg|left|40px|link=http://www.bioblast.at/index.php/Bioblast:About|Bioblast wiki]] | ||
== Popular Bioblast page == | == Popular Bioblast page == |
Revision as of 16:05, 15 January 2019
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Popular Bioblast page
- MitoPedia has been accessed more than
- 60,000 times (2017-11-21)
- 50,000 times (2016-11-30)
- 45,000 times (2016-10-30)
- 40,000 times (2016-07-17)?
- 35,000 times (2016-03-17)
- 30,000 times (2015-12-31)
- 25,000 times (2015-10-28)
- 20,000 times (2015-05-14)
- 15,000 times (2014-11-26)
- 10,000 times (2014-05-19)
- 5,000 times (2012-10-18)
- MitoPedia has been accessed more than
MitoPedia and Bioblast
- Originally MitoPedia expressed the concept of the Bioblast wiki in general. Then the previous page 'MitoPedia' received the term Bioblast info (2014-05-16). The former pages 'MitoPedia Glossaries' or 'Bioblast Glossaries' are now the MitoPedia (2014-11-18).
- Miller GA (1991) The science of words. Scientific American Library, New York: 276 pp.
- "People who know a word can share the idea with other members of their group, and a shared vocabulary is part of the glue that holds people together and allows them to create a shared culture.""" (p 5)
- "Definitions always leak at the margins, whre experts delight in posing counterexamples for their peers to ponder. Fortunately, the typical cases are clear enough that a little fuzziness around the edges does not interfere with the larger picture." (p 31)
- "The simplest notion of a lexicon holds that it is a collection of words, with associated information about each word. As more and more information is added about each word, the lexicon rapidly becomes a major repository of knowledge." (p 32)
- "Definitions play an important role in any theory of meaning, but a definition is not a meaning; meanings are concepts in the minds of people, .." (p 153)
- Definitions can help someone learn a new term for a familiar concept, or refine a concept they already have, or discover a relation between concepts." (p 154)
- "Writing definitions is a difficult and little-appreciated art." (p 155)
- Miller GA (1991) The science of words. Scientific American Library, New York: 276 pp.