Showing posts with label searching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label searching. Show all posts

Monday, 14 July 2014

InterTASC Information Specialists’ Sub-Group (ISSG) Workshop

Suzy Paisley, Anna Cantrell, Ruth Wong, Fiona Campbell, Rachid Rafia, Nick Latimer and Eva Kaltenthaler from HEDS attended the first InterTASC Information Specialists’ Sub-Group (ISSG) Workshop hosted by the University of Exeter on Wednesday 9th July.  135 delegates representing various stakeholders (InterTASC members, NICE, pharmaceutical industry, and event sponsors) in Health Technology Assessment were present at the workshop. The day was very busy with the first half comprising talks on views from four different stakeholders (Evidence Review Groups, pharmaceutical industry, NICE and ISSG).  Suzy Paisley presented on the views and reflections from the ISSG group. This was followed by an hour of questions and discussion.

Four posters from HEDS were presented at the workshop:
Anna Cantrell “Do we need to search MEDLINE and Embase for RCTs when CENTRAL should be sufficient?: a case study of search methods trialled in a HTA review of interventions to prevent postnatal depression”
Ruth Wong “Assessing searches in Single Technology Appraisals: a comparative study of UK and German checklists”
Louise Preston “Improving search efficiency by limiting searches for diagnostic studies to Medline and EMBASE: an exploratory study”
Nick Latimer "Treatment switching in randomised controlled trials: implications for trial design"

Anna Cantrell (left) and Suzy Paisley in Exeter
In the second half of the day, three useful talks were given on trial registers searching, web-searching for HTA reports, and finding information on adverse drug effects. The workshop finished with an interesting talk by Tom Jefferson on Hayashi’s problem: The use of regulatory information for research synthesis. More details about the speakers and workshop can be found here.
Words and image by Ruth Wong

Wednesday, 30 October 2013

PubAdvanced – a new tool for searching PubMed with advanced features

PubAdvanced (http://www.biowebspin.com/pubadvanced/) is a new search interface for searching PubMed with additional features you won’t find via the usual PubMed platform. In particular, PubAdvanced utilises a citation tool called CitImpact - the score of a given publication determined via various algorithms and taking into account:
  • Journal Impact Factor
  • 5-Year Journal Impact Factor
  • Eigenfactor score
  • Article Influence score

PubAdvanced is open access but does require that you register with the site in order to perform a search. The registration form is quick and simple enough and asks for a few details about your job and geographical location.

Amongst the various additional search features are the ability to sort publications from PubMed according to their CitImpact score.

A search for ((“school of health and related research”) or (scharr)) gave the exact same number of results in PubMed and PubAdvanced. I also got the same results when limiting the search by author.

At first glance PubAdvanced seems to be a useful tool and is certainly worth using if you are interested in analysing article and journal impact scores.

For more information about the people behind the tool go to: http://www.biowebspin.com/more/

Tuesday, 20 March 2012

Happy 10th Birthday PROQOLID!


Post by Anthea

PROQOLID, the Patient-Reported Outcome and Quality of Life Instruments database, celebrates its tenth birthday this year. Launched in 2002, it now contains information on over 710 instruments and is constantly growing.

Did you know we have a subscription to PROQOLID in ScHARR? For members of staff wishing to use PROQOLID, please contact ScHARR Library for the login details.

Wednesday, 2 November 2011

Bite Size - Scirus Search Engine



Post by Anna

Yesterday Bite Size session covered the science search engine Scirus. If you missed the session then view the You Tube video from Warner Memorial Library.

Scirus is a science-specific search engine enabling you to search for patents, peer-reviewed articles, theses and scientists and institutional homepages, an excellent source to search for grey literature.


Monday, 31 October 2011

ScHARR Bite Size for Research - Tuesday 1st November - 2.30pm - Eric Wilkes Room - Scirus Search Engine


 Posted by Andy
Do you need to search patents, theses, scientists' homepage and institutional
repositories. Come along to find out about searching Scirus, described as the
most comprehensive scientific research tool on the web. Scirius' focus is
scientific items and it has over 440 million scientific items indexed at last count.
 Results can be exported in RIS format so can be put straight into Reference
Manager, Mendeley or Endnote.

Tuesday, 13 April 2010

The Beast File: Google ('HUNGRY BEAST', ABC TV)




Posted by Andy

I suggest you watch this very short video till the end.

"I know that I bang on quite a lot about Google, and what it does, both for good and ill. I'm particularly concerned about the 'ill' bit, which is one of the reasons why I like to find alternative search engines to it. Of course, this doesn't stop me using Google, just the same as everyone else, but let's discuss this basic flaw in another post. Any how, this is a great video, which I found via The Next Web. It's very clever and thought provoking."
re-blogged from Phil Bradley's Blog -philbradley.typepad.com, Phil Bradley's weblog, Mar 2010


Monday, 12 April 2010

Welcome to Pippa


Posted by Andy

A big welcome to our new member of Information Resources, Pippa Evans.

Hi everyone, my name is Pippa Evans and I'm the latest member of the Scharr Library team.
My main duties include literature searching and providing staff and students with help and expertise with electronic databases and reference management software. Other duties include delivering information skills training, locating documents and developing web 2.0 resources through short projects.

I graduated with a degree in History and Sociology, then completed a graduate traineeship at the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons Trust Library in London. Having moved to Sheffield I completed a Masters in Librarianship at the University of Sheffield.

When not searching online databases I enjoy singing with the Jubal Gospel Choir and walking in the Peaks.

Friday, 26 February 2010

Recommended Website of the Month - Great PDF

Posted by Andy

GreatPDF is a pdf search engine for PDF ebooks, manual, catalogs, sheets, forms and documents. I've tried a few test runs with various search terms, qualitative health research' for example and turned up hundreds of results.

Sadly it does fall down in one or two areas:
  • Firstly, that there is no clear evidence of how many results your search finds, as there are no page numbers.
  • Secondly, there is no advanced search function, hopefully this is something they will rectify in the short-term.
  • Thirdly, there is no additional information in the search results, meaning you have to click on the link to see the paper.

So on that evidence, I would use this for searching for specific PDFs that you know exist, or as a last result when searching for a topic that turns up poor results.

Monday, 7 December 2009

Recommended Website of the Month


Posted by Andy

Microsoft Academic Search is a free academic search engine developed by Microsoft Research Asia, and it is also a test-bed for their object-level vertical search research.

Driven by the latest search engine technology, Microsoft Academic Search enables users to not only find papers but to discover more information that goes beyond simple query results. With Microsoft Academic Search, you can:

  • Locate top research papers
  • Find top scientists, conferences, and journals in a specific field

How are the results ranked?

The objects are sorted based on two separate factors: their relevance to the query and their global importance. The relevance score of an object is computed by considering its attributes and its importance score is calculated by considering its relationships with other objects.

With Microsoft Academic Search you can:
You can search Microsoft Academic Research by clicking here

Wednesday, 1 July 2009

Fefoo


Posted by Andy

Despite being sometimes renowned for being a bull at a gate and that I can quite often rush in like a big old fool where angels fear to tread in their Birkenstocks. Yet in terms of my Internet start page, I have for a very, very, very long time stayed with Google.
Probably before that it was Netscape or Lycos or some similar starting point. That was until today, and I'm not sure whether this new love affair will last but I'm quite curious nonetheless as I move onto a new start page. Looking very much like Google (well the formula works doesn't it?); the search engine in question is Fefoo.

It's not unlike so many of the other multi-search engines such as Dogpile, but the appealing feature of Fefoo is that you can refine your searches quickly and nicely to certain websites and content. That does not mean that Google has had it, but maybe a combination of increasingly finding myself in Google - AKA the Tescos of the World-Wide Web, I'm concerned about the homogenisation of the Internet and that I'm no longer questioning whether it's any good - or maybe it's that I'm just not getting out enough any more.

Fefoo say: " You use it like a normal search engine, but fefoo is not a search engine, its an application that helps you search better. It uses the traditional search engines to search. You search on categories and your search is more refined from the time you start searching. In case you don't use categories it works like a normal search engine. fefoo is not about changing the way you search but it helps you in searching better with less clicks and your search is more precise."

Monday, 30 March 2009

Recommended Website of the Month


Posted by Andy

There have been plenty of search engines over the last few years that have tried but failed to take Google's search engine crown. The simple one term box approach works and as competitors have found out, there's no tangible way of improving on that - it does what it says on the tin, and searches, usually finding what you want with little ease. So some search engines have decided to do what Google do and dissect it, not just using tabs for images and videos, but combining or concentrating on all of these elements.

One of these websites that have got it right is Middlespot. As well as that, Middlespot have done something very...well very Apple Mac/Web2.0 and made a fluid search engine which may not be as hot at searching, but presents the results in a nice scrollable way. It gives you the ability to store pages on one screen and gives you the opportunity to zoom in and out of each saved page - have a play around with it and you'll see what I mean. Anyway, rather than try and explain it myself, here's what Middlespot say.

It's hard to argue with results. A study by Microsoft Research reveals that presenting a screenshot in conjunction with a text result allows a user to locate desired webpages faster and easier in almost every attempt. Our brain is designed to filter, distinguish, associate, and select information first and foremost visually. middlespot.com is designed to take advantage of this strength by providing a patented interface that helps you determine the relevancy of your results with greater efficiency and accuracy.

We believe searching is an iterative activity of evaluation and interpretation that doesn't end with the presentation of a linear list of text only results. It's why we're building the tools to make the activity of search more effective.

You can...

See your results as screenshots that you can pan and zoom like a map

Save and annotate relevant individual results to collections in workpads

Share workpads with others who are looking to you for your expertise

No need to sign up, login, or download a plugin, just start searching.

Screenshots make searching more effective

The benefits of the middlespot.com screenshot gallery become obvious when you begin interpreting your search.
  • An abstract query becomes easier to evaluate, letting you use the visual cues of the result screenshot to narrow your search.

  • Filter out sites that are recognizable as spam, duplicates and cloaked sites, or sites where it is clearly evident from the screenshot that it has no meaningful content, or worse yet, isn't even accessible.

  • Quickly recall the visual presentation of a site you have previously visited.

  • What you see is what you get, no interpreting a result solely from some cryptic text description, then clicking on that result only to discover the page is completely irrelevant.
The middlespot.com screenshot gallery allows you to compare and constrast multiple screenshot results simultaneously, so you can quickly see duplicate results. Or zoom into a specific screenshot and see details that just can't be described by text results alone. We've built the middlespot.com interface to provide you with the tools to really manage your search.

to learn more about using the inteface, please try our tutorial.

Collect results relevant to you

middlespot.com workpads allow you to gather together results that you find relevant to your research. You can collect search results together that are from multiple searches, over any amount of time. We've even built a number of tools that allow you to add to your workpads even when not using the middlespot interface.

Workpads are feature rich. You can rename them to better reflect what they contain, leave a comment describing the contents of the workpad, open the entire workpad in the middlespot.com interface, and add any url you want. Your collected result is stored as a screenshot that you can uniquely annotate with your own comments. The number of workpads you can create is infinite.

To make accessing your workpads easier over multiple sessions, we've placed your workpad tabs on the start page of middlespot.com and at the bottom of the middlespot.com interface.

To learn more about using the inteface, please try our tutorial.

Share your research

Different than a lot of social bookmarking sites is the fact that we don't make your collections public. What you put in your workpad is just for you. It's up to you to share them with who you want. And we've made sharing quick and easy, both for you and the person you are sharing with.

You can email or even just copy the unique URL of your workpad and send that to a friend or colleague. Shared workpads are read only and whenever you update your shared workpad, your friend automatically see's your changes but can't make changes. Shared workpads become a part of their series of workpad tabs (just a different color) making it easy to access your workpad on their computer (just tell them to go to middlespot.com).

If you do want to share your workpads publicly on a blog or website, we've made it possible to do that as well. It's completely flexible so you can decide how big both the embed frame is and the size of the screenshots. Any comments you made about each screenshot are presented as mouse over tips.

Best of all, you know when people have looked at your workpad. A view counter keeps track of how many times your shared community have opened your workpad.

Tuesday, 3 February 2009

Recommended Website of the Month - Lalisio Literature


Posted by Andy

OK, so we're only three days into February, but I thought I'd recommend a useful website, well a search engine for your perusal. Lalisio Literature is a rather nice looking search engine (along the lines of Google Scholar), which searches three different types of academic literature, books, journals and open access articles. They say: "Lalisio Literature is a search engine designed to help you find the right literature for your research, studies, teaching and leisure."

How do they do it?
"For this purpose, we cooperate with major providers of international literature databases: Top booksellers such as Amazon, Abebooks and Powell's are among our partners as well as open access repositories such as arXiv and PubMed Central. Due to the integration of open access repositories our users can find and access cutting-edge articles mostly free of charge. Based on our analyses of content from numerous sources, we develop helpful search suggestions and relevance indicators for your literature search and help you quickly identify the literature you really want."
© Lalisio Literature

Tuesday, 9 December 2008

New! 'Online Learning' course on literature searching from East Midlands RDS!

Picture by Mushon
Post by Anna

East Midlands RDS is pleased to announce its first-ever online learning course on 'Scoping the Literature for your Research Bid'.

It is an online-only course which will run for one week from Monday 23rd February to Friday 27th February 2009. The course is the equivalent of one half-day course.

Please Note: this course is for NHS staff in the Trent Region only.

To book, please visit our website at http://booking.trentrdsu.org.uk/courses.php
or for more info email Claire Beecroft at c.beecroft@shef.ac.uk

Wednesday, 23 July 2008

Health Libraries Group Conference 2008


Photo by tizef
Posted by Anthea

ScHARR Information Resources was well represented at the recent HLG conference held in Cardiff on 21-22 July.

Andrew Booth presented on "Reshaping support services for the X and Y generations" and chaired one of the parallel sessions.

Claire Beecroft had a poster session on "Developing the skills of library para-professionals using a blended learning approach: Precept-Lite!".

Anthea Sutton had two poster sessions, produced in collaboration with Diana Papaioannou & Anna Wilkinson respectively:

"Systematic review searching: an evaluation of methods"

and

"The FOLIOz Experience: tailoring FOLIO e-learning courses to an Australian audience"

For more details on the conference, including links to presentations and posters, please see the HLG Conference website.