
thumb|Front cover of The Principles of Quantum Mechanics (4th ed.) by [[Paul Dirac]] A monograph is generally a long-form work on one (usually scholarly) subject, or one aspect of a subject, most often created by a single author or artist. Traditionally it is in written form and published as a book, but it may be an artwork, audiovisual work, or exhibition made up of visual artworks. In library cataloguing, the word has a specific and broader meaning, while in the United States, the Food and Drug Administration uses the term to mean a set of published standards as well as various guidelines.
A monograph is a long-form work that focuses deeply on a single scholarly subject or aspect of a subject, typically created by one author or artist. It traditionally takes the form of a published book, though it can also be an artwork, audiovisual work, or exhibition, and the term has specialized meanings in library cataloguing and FDA regulation.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
thumb|Front cover of The Principles of Quantum Mechanics (4th ed.) by [[Paul Dirac]] A monograph is generally a long-form work on one (usually scholarly) subject, or one aspect of a subject, most often created by a single author or artist. Traditionally it is in written form and published as a book, but it may be an artwork, audiovisual work, or exhibition made up of visual artworks. In library cataloguing, the word has a specific and broader meaning, while in the United States, the Food and Drug Administration uses the term to mean a set of published standards as well as various guidelines.
==Written works== ===Academic works===
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).