MEDLINE
Last edited February 12, 2009
More by Brittany Horn »
According to a recent study, life sciences professionals spend an average of 12.4 hours per week searching for information - not only on the Internet, but also in company repositories, their own computers and emails. GoPubMed PRO semantic search technologies can significantly reduce the number of hours spent from 12.4 to just 1. This is possible through knowledge-based classification - the platform of the successful GoPubMed. Additionally, GoPubMed PRO includes an Ontology Generation and editing platform that speeds up the modeling of new fields or domains.
Labels: MED: Consumer Health Info, RESOURCES: SE
ReleMed search engine
www.relemed.com/
ReleMed® is a search engine that allows you to find the most relevant answers to your questions. You enter one or a few query words, and then ReleMed searches for articles containing those query words. Unlike other search engines, ReleMed displays your results so that the most relevant articles-the ones most closely matching your query-are shown first.
Currently ReleMed is focused on biomedical findings published in scientific journals. It searches 17 million articles indexed in MEDLINE, the National Library of Medicine's electronic database.
Labels: MEDLINE
MEDLINE®/PubMed® Resources Guide
www.nlm.nih.gov/bsd/pmresources.html
Labels: MEDLINE
Medical Subject Headings - Home Page
www.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/meshhome.html
Labels: MEDLINE
Labels: MEDLINE
Pubfocus performs statistical analysis of the MEDLINE/PubMed search queries enriched with the additional information gathered from journal rank database and forward referencing database.

PubFocus outputs basic statistical information on publication trends, publishing journals and most prolific authors including separate analysis of the first authors (commonly most contributing scientists) and last authors (commonly principal investigators).

PubFocus also determines the quality of research activity for each author and identifies the authors with most impact based on a new algorithm for Author's Rank (AR) calculation. By accounting for the publication's age, author's contribution, journal rank and forward referencing, AR provides a simple and accurate determinant of authors' impact on any given field. Authors with higher AR value are usually the most impacting authors within the field of search. Journal rank (JR) is calculated as follow: JR = dIF * citations-over-age index to account for:
a) Derivative of Journal Citation Reports® Impact Factors published by Thomson Scientific, Inc (dIF).
b) Age of the publication and presence of forward references (citations-over-age index). In general, citations-over-age index boosts the dIF value of new and cited articles proportionally to the number of forward citations and reduces the dIF value of old articles that have not been cited.
Labels: MEDLINE
A biologist-friendly interface for enhanced PubMed search
PubMed Assistant is a stand-alone Java™ program that helps biologists and medical workers get the most out of PubMed search.
Labels: MEDLINE, SCI
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