- We are moving our development infrastructure to Bitbucket.
- We are reanimating the Python client for the REST API.
- We are developing a CKAN extension.
Sunday, December 8, 2013
Feature of the Week: Python Client for the BibSonomy REST-API
Wednesday, November 27, 2013
Release 2.0.40
today, we released version 2.0.40 of BibSonomy. This release includes the following features:
- OpenID users can now have a password sent to them. This converts the OpenID account to a normal account and you can now log in with your username and a password. The OpenID login for this user is then disabled.
- You can now upload SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics) documents.
- We added a new custom tag to the CV page: You can now include your homepage separately.
- Many internal changes like issues with the visibility of the profile picture of a user
Friday, November 22, 2013
Excluding tags with wildcards
in our post about the last Release, we mentioned better capabilities of excluding tags in your searches with wildcard support. Here is an example of what that means and how you can use it:
Let's say you use tags like 'news_2013_09', 'news_2013_10', etc. for tagging news articles of certain months. Furthermore you add tags for the news content like for example 'insurance'. That topic might have occurred frequently in the news.
Furthermore you searched for a certain insurance, so you tagged websites and articles about insurances also with the tag 'insurance'.
Now, if you liked to search for your insurance inquiry, you would also get all the results in the news.
For a longer time, BibSonomy already supports excluding a single tag like 'news' by writing 'sys:not:news' your search query. However, that would be of no help for you in this case, because the tags include the month suffix.
With BibSonomy's new wildcard exclusion feature you can now write 'sys:not:news*' to exclude all the news related posts from your search.
Enjoy the new feature and happy tagging,
Jens
Monday, November 18, 2013
Customize your CV page!
in release 2.0.39, we changed the way BibSonomy's CV page (see http://www.bibsonomy.org/cv/user/<your username>) works. Before this release, we offered a static web page with information taken from your user profile. The look and feel was predefined and could not be changed (see figure 1).
Figure 1: The old CV look and feel |
With the advent of BibSonomy 2.0.39, it is now possible to customize the design of your CV page. We offer a set of exemplary layouts from which you can choose one to instantly prep up the way you're presenting yourself on BibSonomy. If you are a more advanced user, you can also lay a hand on the design itself by creating your own CV page. In the following, we will give you a short overview about the two ways to adapt your CV page to your personal needs.
Choosing a predefined layout
Figure 2: The settings page for your BibSonomy CV. The gray part contains all the tools to edit your CV. You can preview your changes directly below. |
Figure 3: Choose a standard template according to your likes. |
Creating your own layout
Figure 4: The open layout editor |
After you entered your changes, you can either preview your CV by clicking on the corresponding buttons in the bottom right corner or you can save it directly by using the "save" button in the top right corner of the editing area.
If everything is OK, you can then view your shiny new CV on http://www.bibsonomy.org/cv/user/<your username here>. We also offer the same functions for group accounts.
We hope you can make good use of that feature. Over time, we plan to add some treats like extra tags or some help buttons to easily insert frequently used code parts to make the use of the editor more comfortable. New layouts are also on our wishlist.
Happy editing (and tagging) :)
Thomas
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
PUMA in use in Frankfurt
PUMA is a clone of BibSonomy meant for local installations of universities, libraries or research institutes. Like BibSonomy, it allows to collect and share bookmarks and publications but has additional features like a guided export to an institutional repository (read more about PUMA).
As part of the introduction of the HeBIS Discovery Service (HDS) for Hessian university libraries, a customized version of VuFind Discovery System was developed which includes an interface to PUMA. A few months before, Kassel's version of the HDS has been coupled with PUMA.
The original favorites list by VuFind was replaced by a PUMA managed list. This offers many additional features for VuFind users, like new export and citation formats, as well as tagging. Now it’s possible to export literature research in a large variety of formats (BibTeX, EndNote, Harvard, Chicago, etc.) In addition, the entries do not have to be grouped as several favorite lists, but can be organized more clearly by the free assignment of tags. With the appendant tag cloud, entries can be filtered by topic. PUMA users also have the huge advantage that publications stored in VuFind are immediately available in PUMA and can thus be directly accessed and exported from PUMA.
With the new PUMA instance, HDS users in Frankfurt also take advantage of these features. As part of the launch of the HeBIS Discovery Service, more PUMA installations will follow for the universities of Mainz, Marburg, Gießen and Darmstadt.
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
BibSonomy Release 2.0.39
- a new scraper for First Monday
- the REST client now supports the creation of concepts and the renaming of documents
- the CSL output of the REST API was repaired
- a new recommendation framework is integrated that allows other researchers to integrate their recommender algorithms more easily
- plus several smaller internal improvements
Happy Tagging!
Friday, September 6, 2013
Conferator goes INFORMATIK 2013
Almost three years ago we presented the first version of Conferator, when we hosted LWA 2010 in Kassel.
Conferator is built on top of the RFID-based proximity sensing hardware developed by the SocioPatterns collaboration. This technology enables the collection of face-to-face contacts, which can be recalled later. Based on this information, for example, Conferator provides recommendations concerning interesting contacts. In addition, Conferator became a Ubicon application utilizing the Ubicon software platform.
During the last three years the system has been available at several conferences and events, for example, at LWA 2011, LWA 2012, and at ACM Hypertext 2011.
This year we are proud to make the system available at the INFORMATIK 2013 in Koblenz, for the partner conferences KI, MATES, eGov, ePart and Virtual Goods & ODRL.
We expect about up to 350 participants for whom the system will be available.
All these years, the Ubicon team of the Knowledge and Data Engineering group further developed the system to provide a better conferencing experience.
In the current version 2.5, which we specifically designed for INFORMATIK 2013, we concentrated on social network analysis features, data mining components, and performance optimizations.
Let us describe the key features of Conferator and invite you to use the system during INFORMATIK 2013:
- Schedule: The schedule page enables a personalized view on the conference program.
- Overview: The overview page provides a timeline of the Conferator interactions - including, for example, current tweets and BibSonomy posts.
- Map: The map shows the conference locations and other participants.
- My Contacts: The contacts page shows your own contacts throughout the conference.
- People: On the people page, you can browse the list of Conferator participants of the conference, of your friends, persons who want to talk to you and your community members.
- Recommender: Based on face-to-face contacts and talk information, Conferator features an interactive recommender for both participants and talks.
Happy conferencing & networking!
Conferator-Team
Thursday, August 29, 2013
Maintenance
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Release 2.0.38
we're happy to announce the release of BibSonomy 2.0.38. The following new features are included:
- we improved document sharing across groups. You can now control in detail to which specific groups you share your uploaded documents
- Quite a time ago, we shared some thoughts about implementing semantic pingback in BibSonomy, so that authors will be notified if their publications were cited elsewhere. This feature has now arrived.
- We included wildcard matching for the sys:not system tag, to help you exclude tags even better in your searches
- Your CV page is now customizable.
Friday, August 16, 2013
Feature of the week: Importing bookmarks from your web browser
BibSonomy had a bookmark importer for Mozilla Firefox which with the last release was extended such that it is now possible to import your bookmarks from Google Chrome, Safari and Opera in addition to Firefox.
Here are simple steps how to import your bookmarks to BibSonomy
- Export your bookmarks from one of the following browsers:Mozilla Firefox, Google Chrome, Safari, or Opera.
- On the settings page under “import your bookmarks from your browser” select your exported bookmark file. Then click on import.
- Your bookmarks will be added, if they are not already in your bookmark collection.
- You can now edit the tags of your posts by selecting “edit the tags of this post”:
- Add your tags and then press the edit button.
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
Downtime due to server failure
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Release 2.0.37
today, we released version 2.0.37 of BibSonomy. This version comes with the following new features:
- When tag-autocompletion recommends one of the tags you already used, you now see how often you already used it before.
- After searching, the resulting post list is ordered by relevance score. If you like, you can still switch back to order-by-date behavior.
- With BibSonomy's bookmark importers you can now import bookmarks from Safari, Internet Explorer, Chrome, and Opera.
- We added a fallback-scraper which uses Dublin Core metainformation for pre-filling your publication post form when there is no page-specific scraper available.
Happy tagging!
Jens
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Screencasts zur Nutzung von BibSonomy
Das Praxisbüro im Fachbereich 11 der Universität Bremen, Human- und Gesundheitswissenschaften, bietet zwei Screencasts zur Nutzung von BibSonomy an. In den Videos wird am Beispiel erläutert, wie eine bestehende Link- und Literatursammlung in BibSonomy durchsucht und gefiltert werden kann und wie BibSonomy für die eigene Sammlung von Links und Literatureinträgen hilfreich ist.
Die Videos sind zu finden auf den Seiten des Praxisbüros oder direkt bei YouTube. Unterhalb der YouTube-Videos gibt es eine Inhaltsübersicht mit Sprungmarken. Für hörbehinderte NutzerInnen stehen automatisierte Untertitel bereit.
Die Videos sind im Rahmen der Produktion des Lernmodules "Wege ins Auslandspraktikum" für Studierende entstanden, beauftragt von Beate Heitzhausen vom Praxisbüro, ausgeführt durch den Mediengestalter Fadri Bischoff, Bremen.
Das Praxisbüro im Fachbereich Human- und Gesundheitswissenschaften an der Universität Bremen ist erster Anlaufpunkt für Studierende bei Fragen rund um das Studium und versteht sich darüber hinaus insbesonders als Vermittler zwischen Studium und Arbeitswelt.
Wir danken dem Praxisbüro für die Videos und wünschen viel Spaß beim Taggen!
Monday, July 15, 2013
Given Name Recommendations in Nameling
Today, we'll report on the name search platform Nameling - another system which is run at the KDE research group and which regular readers of our blog are probably already familiar with (Discover Names, 20DC13 - The ECML PKDD Discovery Challenge 2013 on Recommending Given Names ).
Its been a while (more than a year) that Nameling has been running stable without any code updates, but meanwhile we weren't idle and wrote some papers about the task of finding similar names by means of analyzing name relatedness based on data from the social web ([1], [2]) and how these statically derived name similarities actually fit to the users' search activities in the running system ([3]). We also considered the task of personalized name recommendations ([4]) which is also the task of the 15th ECML PKDD Discovery Challenge, organized by members of the KDE research group at the university of Kassel, the Data Mining and Information Retrieval Group at the university of Würzburg and the Institut für Verteilte Systeme - Fachgebiet Wissensbasierte Systeme at the Leibniz Universität Hannover (see also our previous blog post).
Now, we integrate given name recommendations in the running Nameling system (you can already get a glimpse at the new recommendation features by visiting Namelings beta version). Firstly, on the fly name recommendations, based on a user's search profile are shown on almost every query page in Nameling (e.g., look at the sidebar while looking for similar names of the given name "Emma").
Via the navigation buttons below the list of recommended names, you can browse through even more recommdations (arrows), or request other recommended names (recycle).
And this is the clue: For the next two months, these name recommendations are provided by participants of the 20DC13 Online Challenge. That is, every recommendation request is anonymously passed to each recommender system of the 20DC13 participants. For each user in Nameling, a randomly chosen system is selected for actually displaying name recommendations. But whenever a user presses the recycle button, this association is changed.
But you can also explicitly ask Nameling for name recommendations, relative to a list of names you like (e.g., the future parents' given names)
By clicking on the '+' and '-' signs, you can add a name to your name recommendation query or, respectively, permanently ban a name from your result views. Of course, you can still add each name to your personal list of favourite names and explore a names neighbourhood. Additionally we added the feature of automatically determining your current location (by clicking on the 'satellite dish'), which allows to improve your name recommendations based on your geographic background.
There is an ongoing debate in the recommender system community, concerning the online vs. offline evaluation of recommender systems. Nameling's name recommendation back-end is designed for easy integration of new recommender systems, which may even reside on servers of affiliate research groups (e.g. participants of the online challenge). The performance of a recommender system is then evaluated relative to actual user interactions with the displayed names (e.g. by counting the number of names which were added to the list of favourite names). These feedback information is also (anonymously) passed to the included recommender systems, so that these systems can adopt and improve their recommendations accordingly.
If you are working on recommender systems and are interested in testing your system in a live setting, feel free to contact us. You only have to implement a simple Java interface or a simple Python interface. If you manage to set up a running recommender system within the next ten days (until July 22nd), you may even take part in the 20DC13 online recommender challenge.
In any case: Keep on tagging and happy number crunching!
Your 20DC13 Team
Stephan, Andreas, Robert, Folke & Juergen
Friday, July 12, 2013
Feature of the Week: Mobile Registration
Hello fellow BibSonomy users,
some of you frequently use the mobile version of BibSonomy. And now it is possible to register via a mobile phone. Let me guide you through some simple steps for the purpose of registering with BibSonomy using a mobile phone:
Navigate to the BibSonomy home page. Once it has has been fully loaded open the login tab at the upper right corner.
Follow the link that says "I have not registered yet, but want to do this now." depicted at the screen below:
Next, fill the forms accordingly and finally, become part of BibSonomy by clicking the 'register' button.Now you've registered with BibSonomy using your mobile phone.
Thank you for reading and as always:Happy Tagging!
Thursday, June 27, 2013
Release 2.0.36
- while editing one of your bookmarks or publications the tag autocompletion shows you the origin of the suggested tag. Whether it is a tag you already used to annotate other resources or a tag of the bookmark/publication you are currently copying from another user or a tag recommended by our service.
- added JSON CSL output to the export pages and export controls. The output is compatible with all CiteProc implementations (PHP, JavaScript, Haskell).
- added a shorturl that directly takes you to your published publications (and bookmarks), just enter http://www.bibsonomy.org/myown and you are redirected to your resources that you have tagged with the myown tag
- improved scrapers (e.g. Mendeley and ACM)
Thursday, June 13, 2013
Feature of the Week: Choose the number of publications you want to export
On every BibSonomy page that lists publications you can get to the export page of the currently displayed publications by hovering over the options icon that you will find on the top right of the list.
After choosing the number of publications you can select the export format from the drop down list above or the links below.
I hope this new feature makes it easier to export publications from BibSonomy.
Happy exporting and tagging!
Daniel
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
Feature of the Week: Sorted BibTex fields
here is a late but great little feature of
When BibSonomy exports your publication posts to BibTeX, it sorts BibTeX fields alphabetically by their name. We found this to be a real time safer when you are looking for specific information in your data.
so long, Happy Tagging!
Jens
Friday, May 24, 2013
Release 2.0.35
sorry for being somewhat silent last week. We have been very busy working on new BibSonomy integrations (you will hear about them soon). Most of these are still in the development branch. Today we released version 2.0.35 of BibSonomy containing mainly additional stuff that what we finished along the way.
Here is what version 2.0.35 got for you:
- A bunch of fixes and adoptions of our scrapers
- New scrapers for:
- journals of the American Society for Microbiology
- Hindawi journals
- The American Physiological Society publications
- An improved selection of the number of posts to be exported
and of course: Happy tagging!
Jens
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
Feature of the Week: Renaming Uploaded Documents
Hello fellow BibSonomy users,
sometimes there is a need to rename a document you've already attached to a post.
Previously, this was not possible in a convenient manner.
But now, due to recent work by Lukas, it is.
First, we pick the post that contains the document.
Next, pressing the icon resembling "rename" next to the file name we want to change ...
... opens the input text field where we can enter the new file name.
Thank you for reading and, as always,
Happy Tagging
Michael
Friday, May 3, 2013
Choose the file you want to import and click "post" (you are welcome to edit some options to adjust the import):
Afterwards you may edit the publication manually:
But the best part is: you can also upload files with many publications. All imported publications will be marked with the tag "imported", so you can easily find and edit them later:
Hope this feature will help to save some of your time.
Happy tagging!
Mark
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
Release 2.0.34
Happy tagging!
Daniel
Friday, April 19, 2013
Feature of this Week: Document Preview Pictures
Voilà, this is how it looks like:
Often, one has still remembers the layout of the paper. Therefore the preview pictures can be really handy for finding out which of the documents is the one you have in mind when searching in your collection. A the icon is really small, hovering over it shows you a larger preview:
Preview pictures are only visible for people who are allowed to access the document. By default, this is only you.
You might wonder that uploading a new document, you only see a generic pdf document symbol. In that case, please be patient and check back the next day. BibSonomy works hard for you and creates the image overnight.
Happy tagging!
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Feature of the week: Add CSL styled publication lists to your TYPO3 webpages
In past we had built an very rudimentary BibSonomy extension for TYPO3, which is not longer supported by TYPO3 v6 and is not further developed by us. But we are proud to present to you the new BibSonomy CSL (ext_bibsonomy_csl) extension, based on TYPO3 Flow.
With our new Extension BibSonomy CSL you can add a list of publications from BibSonomy to your pages. You can style your bibliography with CSL Stylesheets (Citation Style Language). For this you can choose from a set of pre-installed styles, or you can choose a custom style from the web. Additional you have the option to add your BibSonomy tag cloud to your website.
Installation
To install BibSonomy CSL, log into your TYPO3 installation as an administrator and search in the Extension Manager => Import Extensions for ext_bibsonomy_csl and import them.After import is finished the extension will be shown in the section "Available Extensions". Press the + symbol for installation.
Add publication lists with Frontend Plugin
In the subtab Layout you can choose one of the (pre-)installed citation styles to layout your publication list. If your desired CSL style isn't contained in the default selection, then you can insert a custom style, by entering the XML code of the stylesheet. The Citation Style Language (CSL) is an open XML-based language to describe the formatting of citations and bibliographies. A large list of freely available styles can be found on http://www.zotero.org/styles/.
In the third subtab 'Login' you have to enter your BibSonomy API credentials. For this you need your username and your API key.
Add your BibSonomy Tag Cloud with Frontend Plugin
Manage your CSL styles with the Backend Plugin
- Direct input: Enter the XML source of your style in the text area and press Save to add the style
- Import from URL: Enter the URL of an Citation Style file and press Import
- Upload CSL file: Select a CSL XML file from your filesystem and press Upload
Happy tagging,
Sebastian!
Friday, April 5, 2013
Feature of the Week: Sort your Post Lists
Since the last release of BibSonomy 2.0.33 we announced a few changes: one of them is the new feature to sort publications by the BibTeX field number.
In a previous blog entry we introduced the URL parameters sortPage and sortPageOrder. With the use of the URL parameters you can sort your publication lists by different BibTeX fields in an ascending or descending order.
As of now the sortPage parameter is extended by another option number. The number field of a BibTeX file represents the issue number of a journal, magazine or tech-report. Now you can sort the publication lists in BibSonomy by this issue number.
Here is an example in search of "social" with a descending order by the BibTeX fields journal, issue and number:
http://www.bibsonomy.org/user/sdo/social?sortPage=journal|issue|number&sortPageOrder=desc
Happy Tagging !
Nils
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
Release 2.0.33
- sorting of publication posts by their BibTeX field numbers via url parameter sortPage=number
- new webservice for querying related tags
- JCBScraper
- Improved rest-client-api including more robust charset handling and document uploads
Jens
Monday, March 4, 2013
20DC13 - The ECML PKDD Discovery Challenge 2013 on Recommending Given Names
All over the world, future parents are facing the task of finding a suitable given name for their children. This choice is influenced by different factors, such as the social context, language, cultural background and especially personal taste. Most books, websites or mobile apps aid parents only by offering alphabetically ordered list of names.
In the challenge, participants will explore different recommender strategies and their ability to predict names, that users will find interesting. Hereby, the recommendation of names provides a serious and versatile task, that can be approached from several different perspectives:
- The influence of personal taste, language and geographic user location, for example, presents an opportunity for context-aware recommendations.
- The influence of the social context of a user brings in the social network analysis community as another source to improve the quality of the recommender with its methods.
- The etymological roots as well as connotations of names that have arisen over time (e.g., through popular cultural, political or religious bearers of a given name) suggest that methods based on inherent semantics and “content” may also yield successful recommendation approaches.
- Methods from the field of sentiment analysis may help to distinguish names which are popular because users like those names from those which are popular because users are interested in their context.
Results from an online and an offline experiment will be presented during a workshop, that is held in conjunction with this year's
More info on the challenge, on the registration, the data set and the workshop can be found on the official Discovery Challenge Website.
The registration is open!
Your 20DC13 Team
Stephan, Andreas, Robert, Folke & Juergen
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Release 2.0.32
today we released version 2.0.32 of BibSonomy. This release includes many internal changes.
External changes are:
- Redirect to your login page if a login error occurred
- the dropdown menu on the top doesn't disappear as easily as before
- A new scraper for the GBV (www.gbv.de)
Friday, February 22, 2013
Feature of the Week: PUMA II
As you may already know PUMA builds on top of the BibSonomy technology and most of the developments made within PUMA II will be available as new BibSonomy features. The project started at the beginning of February and will run one year with an option for a second year. For PUMA II, the DMIR from the university of Würzburg group joined the team consisting otherwise of the KDE group and the library the University of Kassel.
One major goal of the project is to establish a community around PUMA. To reach this we aim for other institutions which will host the PUMA system like the library at our university. Further, we will work on a lot of new features. Here a short list which provides an overview:
- community entries for publications with wiki like versioning and audited entries,
- better integration into third party systems like moodle and typo3 (new or improved plugins),
- single sign on and Shibboleth authorization,
- improved frontend and better support pages,
- better open social support,
- the integration of ping back and
- a new concept to improve the functionality for groups.
In the near future we will report progress of the project and of course all details on the new features.
Happy tagging
Andreas
Monday, February 11, 2013
Feature of the week: Organizing a Research Group's Literature Suggestions
For our scientific society we would like to allow its members to make suggestions for literature that should be added to the society's database. The group members could use BibSonomy to add suggestions easily using BibSonomy's browser add-on. This works only if suggestions can be easily added. Is this possible with the browser add-on or does it require an additional step?Our answer reads as following:
In principle, there are two mechanisms to achieve your goal. Both are triggered by system tags:
- Members of your group can use the tag for:GROUPNAME to copy a post directly "into" the group, i.e., the copy is afterwards owned by the user that owns/constitutes the group.
- Members of your group can use the tag send:GROUPNAME to copy a post into the group's inbox. There, the group user can add the post to the group's collection or ignore it (i.e., delete it from the inbox).
Another option would be to just agree upon a specific tag and then all group members annotate relevant posts with that tag. You can access those posts then at http://www.bibsonomy.org/group/GROUPNAME/TAG.
Happy Tagging!
Thursday, February 7, 2013
Release 2.0.31
today we released BibSonomy 2.0.31!
This release contains new scrapers, namely:
- Econstor
- APA
- BMJOpen
- CDP from Sage
- Pharmacognosy
Internally, we prepared several new features for the next release, which just aren't ready yet :-)
Happy tagging!
Friday, January 25, 2013
Feature of the week: Migrating your bookmarks from Connotea to BibSonomy
as you may have noticed, Connotea will be shut down at the beginning of March this year (see http://connotea.org/). For those of you who want to keep their bookmarks from Connotea, why not migrate to BibSonomy? In the following, I want to show you how to do it step by step.
In BibSonomy, you also can organise and share your bookmarks. We distinguish between publications (for scientific articles, etc.) and bookmarks (for websites). Publications are usually characterized through metadata like title, author, year, abstract, publisher etc. whereas bookmark posts mainly contain a URL and its title. For both of these kinds of posts, you can assign tags as well as a description.
Another feature of BibSonomy lies in the social organization of users into followers, friends, spheres and groups, each with separate privacy settings, i.e. you can control almost freely who can see your entries, based on post-level!
The best part of it: BibSonomy is completely free! You can sign up right here, right now :-)
Of course you do not have to start from scratch, if you already have a collection of bookmarks. BibSonomy is able to import your bookmarks from Connotea! In the following, we will show you how to do that :-)
1. Export Your Information from Connotea
As soon as you have created an account in BibSonomy, you should log in to Connotea and save your Bookmarks. Do it the following way:Fig. 1: Use the proper "export list" link! |
Fig. 2: Download your bookmarks in BibTeX format. |
2. Importing BibTeX Publications in BibSonomy
After logging in on the BibSonomy website, you have to open the "post publication" dialog. You can find it on the grey bar in the menu "add post" (see figure 3).Fig. 3: Enter the "post publication" dialog. |
Fig. 4: Choose a file to upload. |
After you've done this, you will notice the parsing results at the bottom of the page, as exemplified in figure 5.
Fig. 5: Parsing results |
In our example, we were able to successfully parse two publications. At this point, they will have already been added to your collection, but you can still change the tags.
As you can see in figure 5, the bookmark with a link to "My Google" could not be recognized as a publication, because the BibTeX entry lacked information about authors or a year of publication. Because of this, it has not yet been added to your collection, because our system distinguishes between publications and bookmarks, as we already mentioned above.
After a click on "home" on the left of the grey menu bar you should now be able to see your publications posts :-)