|
Support : eNewsletters : Chronolog Archives
From the Editor Supporting unemployed librarians
Dialog launches Chinese Patents Fulltext in English During April Dialog will be loading the English-language (MAT) version of Chinese patents, created by Scipat and MatrixWare™. File 325 will contain all Chinese patent applications and utility models from 1985 to date. These documents represent all applications and granted patents and utility models published under the first modern Patent Law of China. The database banner will show the current loading status. When the file is complete, you will be able to set up Alerts to monitor technologies or companies of interest. Other features of the file include:
Patent information specialists in industry, patent analysts, patent office searchers and examiners, patent specialists in legal firms and anyone doing business in China will find Chinese Patents Fulltext an important source for:
Patents, written with technical precision but shrouded in legal jargon, can be challenging to understand in any language. The Chinese Patents Fulltext file has been created using state of the art statistical Machine Translation software, with reviews by technical specialists (Human Assistance). The Claims, Description and Abstract are all fully searchable, allowing you to identify relevant documents, explore the legal scope of the patents and uncover technical information. Following initial analysis full human translations may still be required in some cases. With its timely updating and extensive coverage, Chinese Patents Fulltext (File 325) is your most comprehensive option for Chinese patent searches.
SPECIAL LIMTED TIME OFFER! 50% off all Alert profiles for key pharmaceutical industry and drug pipeline news sources During this period, all Alerts profiles in the pharmaceutical news sources listed below will be half the published price. Take advantage of this great opportunity to assess needs, set up new Alerts and refine or expand existing profiles!
For information about the comparative coverage of these and other Dialog and DataStar databases, see the convenient reference chart. If you need assistance in setting up Alert profiles, contact our Global Customer Support team at . Additionally, the following resource from our “How Do I…?” series covers a key application for accessing the vast amount of pharmaceutical industry trade literature on Dialog and DataStar: You won’t want to miss the chance to take advantage of this special offer in April through June!
A new Dialog
New Innography command facilitates post-processing
Example : innography s1/5,6-10 bajabev@company.com
Example : innography s3/all bajabev@company.com
Example : innography bajabev@company.com *Note: The Innography user name may be omitted after the first export. For more information contact the .
Dialog plays vital role in your cleantech revolution research
Use Dialog’s comprehensive collection of technical databases — Ei Compendex® (File 8) and Inspec® (File 4) among them. For example, finding the following titles could suggest areas of importance in cleantech: "Convergence of cleantech and nanotech and the benefits to the nanotech sector," "Top 10 ways nanotech will impact cleantech," "Clean technology — Supernatant recirculation after separation of chromium." Discover new ideas and technologies at conferences or in their proceedings in databases like Inside Conferences (File 65), government-sponsored research in NTIS – National Technical Information Service (File 6) and SciSearch®: A Cited Reference Science Database (File 34,434). To identify scientists and engineers working in the cleantech arena, use SciSearch to track scientific journal articles and cited references to important papers.
Whether you want to find the top five venture capital cleantech sectors, companies receiving the most funding for cleantech research, countries increasing their spending on cleantech or the top global investors, Dialog news, business and market research databases can provide the facts.
Free File of the Month — World News Connection (WNC) Benefits to using WNC are many:
Learn more about the database in the Overview of World News Connection. Throughout April, explore this file up to $100 for free (either DialUnits or Connect Time). Output and Alerts charges are not included. Attend overview sessions on WNC scheduled on April 7 and 14, and read the WNC Search Tip in this issue.
New feature: Stories from the front lines Dialog covers both my scientific research and marketing needs As another example, I usually use a pipeline database for collecting market information on our products. For an example, I needed information about a specific drug, including the information about the originating company, pharmacology, pharmacokinetics, adverse events and therapeutic trials of this drug. I found this in the database using its special indexing. This helped me master the market information about our product. In a few words, “Dialog is a very good friend in my work.” — ( Linjie, I)
Reloads to MEDLINE on Dialog and Embase on DataStar
Error correction in original documents adds value in Derwent World Patents Index (DWPI) At Thomson Reuters, the publisher of DWPI, the DWPI production teams use both programmatic rules and human endeavor to identify and correct as many of these errors as possible, to ensure the accuracy of key value-add elements such as the DWPI patent family and Patent Assignee codes, and also improve searching through the addition of International Patent Classification codes (IPCs). Each week data from the various patent offices is loaded (receipted) into the DWPI production system and conversion/validation programs are run to standardize all of the bibliographic data fields into a standard DWPI format. Through this process records with errors or missing data are identified and routed to experts in the production team to be manually corrected. Typical errors include incorrect priority or application numbers, wrong patent assignee names, or missing data such as the IPCs.
In the first two months of this year the DWPI production teams made corrections to 6,198 records with incorrect or missing priority information, and have manually applied IPC codes to 450 PCT records initially published without any classification. Corrections to the priority data improve the accuracy of the DWPI patent family, as this is a key data element in bringing together patents relating to the same invention.
Correcting errors in the original patent content is a key aspect of the DWPI value add, providing searchers with the most comprehensive and accurate value added patent content in one file — Derwent World Patents Index.
A Proximal and a Distal Tip
“Can you find all the patents for this company?” is a frequently requested patent search. As much as I hate answering a question with another question, this one begs more information and sometimes I would find myself too afraid to ask. I was once asked by a principal in a medium-sized company how to find all patents assigned to the company’s scientists that weren’t owned by the company. When I asked about this search, I was told there was concern some of the scientists working at the company were patenting on their own! I felt sneaky doing so, but this is a search to ensure the inventors were living up to their contracts. Gladly, I didn’t find anyone filing patent applications outside the company, but I could envisage someone taking it a step further and setting up a periodic Alert on its inventors’ filings to ensure future compliance! At least an Alert arriving every once in a while keeps the creepiness out of doing a search like this on demand. I spend a lot of my time looking for background on a company’s intellectual property, and it looks like there is no paucity of holes in which to hide a patent or a trademark. A simple search for who owns what can be similarly misleading. For example, how about patents assigned to the company but later sold? What about patents owned by the president of the company but not assigned to the company? Are they her private property or is there some obligation to the shareholders? And, what about the company itself — is it affiliated with other companies that can be used to hide property? Calling all resources Two key pieces of information can result from these databases — the names of company affiliates and also those of officers/directors. In the case of smaller or startup companies, quite often an entrepreneur inventor gets a patent and then monetizes it by forming a company. Whether or not this inventor reassigns the patent to the company is a personal decision, but without the patent’s technology the new company may not exist. So, technically, the company does not own the patent, but it is an important part of the company’s business, and an answer to the search at the beginning of this column would not be complete without some investigation into what properties the principals of the company own, in addition to what is in the company’s name. For example, a quick look at the various databases from Kompass International (Kompass Western Europe (File 590), Kompass Middle East/Africa/Mediterranean (File 585), etc.) yields names of directors for many companies. I recall checking the directors of a company for inventorship and found at least one who had multiple patents, some of which were an important part of the company’s product line. However, there was no document that reassigned the rights from the inventor to the company (check the patent number as PN= in INPADOC/Family and Legal Status (File 345) to see the assignment information). So, while this did not conform to the exact answer of the question above, it does deserve a separate paragraph. Indeed, I have since adopted this method of checking other databases whenever looking for patent ownership. Another item to consider is subsidiaries and parent companies. A look at, for example, Disclosure (File 101) shows company subsidiaries. A simple search would be to EXPAND CO=HONEYWELL, SELECT the appropriate items and TYPE out the subsidiaries (TYPE S1/SB/1) would generate a list of companies also owned by Honeywell, including AlliedSignal Holdings BV (Netherlands), Novar Corporation, Trend Control Systems (UK), and Prestone Products Corp. Again, these subsidiaries would be a separate paragraph, followed by research in, say, INPADOC (File 345) to see if any patents originally assigned to these companies were reassigned to the parent or might be used by the parent as products. The patent portfolios of the parents/subsidiaries may be separate but the different companies may be sharing resources as a sort of internal license or such. Once you have the names of the directors, it is a simple matter to search all the names at once and then NOT out the company name in the assignee field to find patents assigned to the directors but not to the company. (e.g., SELECT AU=(lugosi b? or karloff b?) NOT PA=universal pictures?). This is the sneaky search I did for the company owner who wanted me to check on his employees. So, a simple search request for patents for a company may have a lot of additional paragraphs. This is creepy. No, it’s technology
New and enhanced D&B WorldBase databases File 517 includes nearly 50 million U.S. companies, more than doubling the current coverage found in D&B Dun’s Market Identifiers (File 516). Files 518 and 521, containing family affiliations, executives and basic financials, include nearly 95 million international companies, almost doubling current coverage. All databases are updated with quarterly reloads. Note: no current links to premium pre-formatted reports are available. While features such as /ULTIMATE, to LIMIT retrieval to the ultimate parent record, and REPORT remain, exciting new features have been loaded into the databases. These features include additional terms on the SF= field, such as MARKETABLE — complete records with all required fields, ACTIVE — recently confirmed as active and LINKED — records with linkage to their corporate families. Review the March Chronolog article and individual Bluesheets for more details. |
Dialog launches Chinese Patents Fulltext in English New Innography command facilitates post-processing Dialog plays vital role in your cleantech revolution research Free File of the Month – World News Connection (WNC) New feature: Stories from the front lines Discover: Scientific, Technical and Medical Validate: Intellectual Property Content Updates Market: Business & News Content Updates Use Dialog indexing and output formats for cost-effective searching Then, identify the predefined format options that work best for you. Format 6 provides the company name, DUNS Number, date of history operations text and the type and date of the last financial statement, if present. Format 12 gives the company information and history and operations text, which may provide just the background data you need. Notice this database has no Format 9. This protects you and forces you to look carefully at the format options and choose the most appropriate one. Note: Be aware that the format FULL works, and it is Format 15, which is the full record.
Free File for May Search up to $100 for free in the file (Connect Time or DialUnits) in May. Output and Alerts costs are not included. See an Overview of File 89 to learn more about this geological database.
Reminder: Update your user profile information
April events
2010 Database Catalog
Tracking competitors’ R&D? Take advantage of ProQuest’s vast Science and Technology Collections
Business research involves so much more than companies, industries and economics. Most businesses need to stay up to date on research, development and innovation to jump ahead of the market. Consider ProQuest’s Science and Technology Collections. These collections help your scientists focus discovery and understand the technology behind their inventions. These discipline-oriented databases have recently evolved to feature Deep Indexing and access to full-text resources. ProQuest developed the unique Deep Indexing feature by creating relevant terms to describe the information contained within a table, chart, figure or graph, allowing the researcher to vastly improve his or her search efficiency through more precise, focused discovery of relevant articles and publications. In addition, with access to many full-text publications comes the ability to retrieve the full text of many of the citation records with a simple mouse click! Libraries can add the full-text components enabling researchers to more easily link out to journal articles held within the ProQuest full-text packages, as well as the library’s other full-text holdings. Browse ProQuest’s new science and technology collections to review lists of subject names with links to source lists.
Training schedule A few English-language sessions highlighted for April include:
Read the March issue of Training Updates to keep up to date with all training initiatives at Dialog and subscribe to receive your own email copy.
New Documentation
Nominate a Quantum2 InfoStar
Do you know an information professional who is an inspiring example of creativity and innovation? InfoStars are enthusiastic and positive about the value and future of information services regardless of their position within their organizations and act as catalysts for change to champion and support their information center. Through their example and initiatives, they serve as role models for others by being passionate in one or more of these spheres of activity:
Dialog is seeking nominations in North America for the InfoStar awards to be announced at the forthcoming SLA Annual Conference in New Orleans June 13-15, 2010. If you know someone you think meets any or all of these criteria, send an email to indicating why you are nominating your selected candidate. Closing date for nominations is Friday, May 14.
Dialog search tip: How can I find a particular country in WNC? Topic: How does the world outside the United States view the Iraqi elections? Search for keywords in the Title OR the Lead Paragraph (/TI,LP) fields. Restrict to a publication date range and REMOVE DUPLICATES since the file is updated hourly and duplicate records may appear. SELECT IRAQ?/TI AND IRAQ/GN AND ELECTION?/TI,LP SELECT S1 AND PD=20100225:20100430 RD One advantage of WNC is the news highlights from the OSC or summaries of hard copy and electronic newspaper articles and periodicals. These can be valuable at-a-glance compilations of the latest headlines with article synopses. The Word Count field in Format 8 reveals these are more than just lists of headlines. To find OSC summaries, for example, on Iraq: SELECT JN=IRAQ -- OSC SUMMARY DIALOG(R)File 985: World News Connection(R)
DataStar Search Tip: Using WebCharts What a perfect opportunity to run a search in BIOSIS Previews for recent developments in a medical technology and create a WebChart! Note: You must download the WebCharts software: On the Titles/Display page, under WebCharts, click the link to “Help with WebCharts.” On this help page find the link to download WebCharts and click to download the application. This example describes a search for recent advances in robotic surgery on humans with nephritic or renal conditions. In DataStarWeb Advanced Search in BIOL, restrict to information added within the last six months.
WebCharts have excellent functionality, such as the ability to export to Excel, move columns and rows, sort data, add or hide columns and rows and much more. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||