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About an annotated bibliography

Today an updated version of my bibliography of papers about distributed approximation is out (see here on the arxiv).

What it is

The idea is to have a list of papers, with a few items for each, telling what is the setting, the main result, and how it compares with the other papers. The origin of this one is a project for which it was important to understand previous work, and the literature was very confusing. So I did the first version of this bibliography for my colleagues and myself, and then when we finally abandoned the project I thought it would be nice to make it readable and public.

Note that it is not a survey: I am not an expert of the area, I don’t explain any proof technique, do not highlight any open problem. It is just an annotated list of papers.

Why it’s useful

I think that such documents are useful, and that we should spend more time writing them, even if they are not counted as publications.

First, it provides a good tool when starting a project in an area that one does not know well. It provides an exhaustive list of the papers of the area, which allows to understand (1) the history of a problem, (2) the state of the art (at the date of the latest update), and possibly (3) which papers are to be credited for a given technique. In this sense, it makes the area easier to reach, and avoids having only a small set of authors being able to understand what’s going on.

Second, such bibliographic documents allow for a more healthy citation culture in research papers. Without a bibliography to cite, one is often in a problematic situation for citing papers: