Biomedical Information Retrieval from Net
The Presentation consists of over 90 Power Point PPT slides keeping in mind Bio-Medical Researchers. [Paid / Fee based services like Web of Science are not included in this presentation]
Presentation starts with an emphasis need for having a planned search strategy and evaluation of the retrieved results. The best tool and Internet resource to explore would depend upon the type of information being sought from the net. For general non-scholarly information Internet Search Engines, Meta Search Engines, Web Directories and Subject Guides would be the best way to start with. However there is need to evaluate all such information. Simple criteria - like the authority behind the information; the date of creation and modification and commercial interests if any - can be used to evaluate the authenticity of the information retrieved. Medical websites with "HONcode" logo could be easily evaluated and trusted.
For scholarly literature, researchers are advised to start with Bibliographic Databases. These databases provide references to high quality peer reviewed journals. PubMed and IndMED (For Indian Journals) are best known under this category. The presentation has some interesting pictures to explain the need for "Controlled Vocabulary" like MeSH. Other tools like Scirus can also be used for retrieving scholarly information. Google Scholar can be used to for limited "Cited By" information along with references.
Coming to Full Text of articles, looking for libraries' holdings would be a better strategy. "Union Catalogue" is useful tool to explore collection of neighborhood libraries. Many good journals are now coming out from Open Access Publishers like BioMed Central and PLoS. Some of the good Indian medical journals are also available for free through Internet. NIC's medIND project and MedKnow (an Indian Open Access Publisher) have been instrumental in putting most of them online. Directory of Open Access Journals is a useful tool to find out Open Access Journals in a subject domain. Other resources for finding full text articles are Institutional (like EPrints@IISc ) and Subject Repositories (like OpenMED@NIC). There are now about 1000 such registered and OAI-PMH compliant repositories all over the world. Tools like ROAR can used to find a relevant repository. These repositories can also be searched through search engine like Google and some special OAI-PMH search engines.
The presentation ends with some special type of resources like Cochrane Library (made freely accessible to Resident Indians through sponsorship by ICMR).
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- Slide 1: Bio-Medical Information
Retrieval from Net
By
Sukhdev Singh
- Slide 2: PLAN
Problem of Plenty on Net.
Without a proper plan, you would lost in the sea of
Information.
Therefore, have a PLAN
• Choose the most appropriate place to look
• Develop an effective search strategy
• Carry out the search
• Critically evaluate the results obtained
- Slide 3: Appropriate Place?
- Slide 4: Appropriate Place?
Will depend on what you are looking for !!!
• General Information
– Web Search Engines / General Web Resources
• Journal References
– Databases like PubMed / IndMED etc) / Scholar Google
• Full Text Articles
– Free Open Access.
– Fee Based – From Libraries.
• Best Practices / Evidence Based Medicine
– Cochrane Library
- Slide 5: General Information
- Slide 6: Best for Non-Scholarly Information
- Slide 7: General Information – Web
Search Engines / Resources
• Search Engines
• Meta-Search Engines
• Subject Directories
• Subject Guides
- Slide 9: Search Engines
• Full-text of selected Web pages.
• Search by keyword, trying to match exactly the
words in the pages.
• No browsing, no subject categories.
• Databases compiled by \"spiders\" (computer-robot
programs).
- Slide 12: Meta-Search Engines
• Meta-Search Engines quickly and superficially search
several individual search engines at once.
• Return results compiled into a convenient format.
• They only catch about 10% of search results in any of
the search engines they visit.
- Slide 14: Web Directories
• Hand-selected sites. Organized into hierarchical
subject categories.
• Often annotated with descriptions (not in Yahoo!).
• Browse subject categories or search using broad,
general terms.
• NO full-text of documents. Can search only the
subject categories and descriptions.
- Slide 20: Subject Guides
• Web pages of collections of hypertext links on a
subject.
• Compiled by \"expert\" subject specialists, agencies,
associations, and hobbyists.
- Slide 25: Evaluating Your Web Search Results
Each page should be examined and the following
questions answered:
2. Who? Who is the authoring agency or individual?
3. What? What is the author's credentials?
4. Where? Where is the author's affiliation?
5. When? When was the page last updated
6. Why? Why is the page in existence? What is the
author's purpose?
7. How? How does the page appear?
- Slide 30: Remember !!!
• The Web just does not have it all. Even the best
search engine will only search what is available.
Remember that the Web is only the first tool in
your arsenal of available resources.
• Each search engine is different. Read the help
before you proceed. Determine if you are using a
Web directory or a search engine. See if there is an
\"advanced search\" feature.
- Slide 31: So, What we have learned?
For General Information
(Non-Scholarly / Non Peer-Reviewed)
–Search Engines
–Meta Search Engines
–Web Directories
–Subject Guides
•Evaluate Your Web Search Results
- Slide 32: Scholarly
Information
•References
Bibliographic
Databases
-PubMed
-IndMED
Search Engine
-Scholar Google
- Slide 33: Bibliographic Databases
• Cover Peer Reviewed Literature. Journals are
selected after quality checks.
• References along with abstracts are available
sometimes links to free full text of articles.
• Require familiarization on searching.
• Knowledge of Boolean Operators; Medical Subject
Headings (MeSH) and Qualifiers are required for
advanced searching.
- Slide 34: http://pubmed.gov
Includes MEDLINE® (Medical Literature Analysis and
Retrieval System Online) is the U.S. National Library of
Medicine's® (NLM) premier bibliographic database that
contains over 16 million references to journal articles in life
sciences with a concentration on biomedicine. A distinctive
feature of MEDLINE is that the records are indexed with
NLM's Medical Subject Headings (MeSH®).
- Slide 36: Overview
of Boolean
Searching
- Slide 41: Is the life so Simple with
Computers?
• Let us say I want -
PITCH report of T20 World Cup
Final between India and Pakistan
- Slide 42: PITCH
- Slide 43: Problem is with Natural
Languages
• Synonyms
– (One Concept – different Words)
• Female
• Lady
• Woman
• Homonyms
– (One Word – different Concepts)
• Multiple Words (Phrase)
• Punctuation
• etc..
- Slide 48: What about
Indian
Research?
All International
Research !!!
- Slide 49: Coverage of Indian Journals
• Only 25 – 32 Indian Medical Journals are
covered in PubMed.
• This means world Indian research does not
get exposed adequately.
• No credit for good work being done in the
areas dealing with local medical problem.
- Slide 50: IndMED
• IndMED Database
• Bibliographic Database – indexes 77 Indian
Biomedical Journals
- Slide 55: Google Scholar
\"Google Scholar uses Google search technology to
search for scholarly materials such as: peer-
reviewed papers, theses, books, abstracts and
articles and more. Results come from academic
publishers, professional societies, preprint
repositories, universities and other scholarly
organizations. Some of the literature will be freely
found on the Web, while some links will offer the
full-text of articles for payment.\"
http://scholar.google.com
- Slide 61: So, for Scholarly Information
• We start with Bibliographic Databases having
references to journals and other scholarly
literature
• Different from Search Engines in respect to
relying on Boolean Operators and Controlled
Vocabularies.
• PubMed, Scirus – International
• IndMED – Indian
• Scholar Google special in some aspects but
scope not clearly defined.
- Slide 62: Scholarly
Information
Full text
Journal
Articles
• Most expensive
library resource
• No Library can afford
all the journals / Not
even the core Journals
of a subject
• Things can improve
with “Open Access”
to scholarly literature
- Slide 63: Some Free
Resources for Full
Text Articles
• From Open
Access Publishers
• Indian Journals
online
• From Institutional
/ Subject
Repositories
- Slide 64: http://uncat.nic.in
- Slide 76: MedKnow
- Slide 77: OA Archives or Repositories
• OA archives or repositories are free to
access and allows uploading of articles
and other scholarly materials by
authors.
• Archives may belong to institutions,
such as universities and laboratories, or
disciplines, such as physics and
economics.
- Slide 78: http://archives.eprints.org/
- Slide 81: Some Other Examples
http://dlist.sir.arizona.edu/
http://eprints.rclis.org/
http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/index.html
- Slide 82: Full Text Journal Articles
• Most of the Journals Requires High
Subscription Fee – Libraries are find
it difficult to afford even the core
journals.
• Some relief by Open Access Journals
/ Repositories
• Use Directories like DOAJ and
ROAR locate free resources
- Slide 83: Some Resources
- Slide 84: Cochrane Library
• Paid Service
• Made accessible to Indian Residents
through Sponsorship by ICMR
• Systematic Reviews
- Slide 92: Was That Tooo Much?
- Slide 93: • Start with Google
• Learn to Use PubMed
• Use IndMED –
http://indmed.nic.in
• Take help from your Librarian.
- Slide 94: THANK YOU