|
Support : eNewsletters : Chronolog Archives
From the Editor In Europe, we hope to see you at the Dialog Forum in Paris on June 10. Register to attend this half-day event for an introduction to release 1 of our new product with a focus on scientific discovery. Learn search tips and techniques and much more. Also in this issue take advantage of the discounts on Alerts in pharmaceutical industry and drug pipeline news sources and Professional ABI/INFORM Complete™ for Dialog customers. Read articles from our experts, and, of course, try Dialog Global Reporter, the free file for June.
Join us at SLA 2010! Where you can find Dialog and ProQuest at SLA
Also, mark your calendar for some of the more than 20 ProQuest- and Dialog-sponsored division events, and drop by the Dialog-ProQuest booth #703. We look forward to seeing you!
SPECIAL LIMITED TIME OFFER! 50% off all Alert profiles for key pharmaceutical industry and drug pipeline news sources
If you need assistance in setting up Alert profiles, contact our team. You won't want to miss the chance to take advantage of this special offer through June!
Free File of the Month — Dialog Global Reporter Containing more than 63 million records, Dialog Global Reporter shows its diversity — from marketing and banking to the European Union to aerospace and defense, engineering and automotive to biotech, retailing and computers, to name just a few. This English-language database contains full-text articles for a majority of the English-language sources. Abstracts are provided for non-English articles. Some contributors of premier sources include Chemical Business NewsBase (CBNB), and key international newspapers (United Kingdom: The Guardian, The Independent and The Observer, elsewhere, e.g. India Today, China Post, Japan Corporate News). Using Dialog Global Reporter
Learn more about the database in the Overview of Dialog Global Reporter. Throughout June, explore this file up to $100 for free (either DialUnits or Connect Time). Output and Alerts charges are not included. On June 3 and 9, attend overview sessions on "Finding Worldwide Business Intelligence and News on Dialog Featuring Dialog Global Reporter (File 20)."
Dialog introduces the RANK command Dialog users welcomed this command for competitive, market and patent analysis, locating experts and much more. The possibilities appeared endless: finding companies holding the most patents for hair-coloring products, identifying a company's R&D efforts, locating the most frequently cited author in a subject or finding additional terms for a search strategy. Dialog has been a leader in innovation throughout its history. Seventeen years ago, well before the Internet was a household word, Dialog was creating powerful search innovations. Today, we continue to offer innovative new services—watch for the new Dialog platform coming soon.
IPC codes in Inspec on Dialog
The importance of IPC codes for prior art
Inspec (File 2) will soon have IPC8 codes added to 75% of its more than nine million records. Read the article on IPC codes in Inspec in this issue, and enter HELP NEWS 2 online for more details. IPC8s provide a common thread between patent and non-patent technical literature (NPL) databases. Databases like Inspec make it easy to gather records with the same IPC8 classification for any patent of interest. Furthermore, you can limit the records to those published prior to a patent's priority date. The implementation of IPC codes will be a valuable tool for the prior art searcher, allowing the ready clustering of relevant non-patent literature within the same familiar code structure used for patents. Here's how
You can also select the RANK numbers for more focused topics covered by the IPC8 category for inkjet printers. Other options include RANKing the records by Author to determine expertise and relationships between authors and inventors, or by Corporate Source to understand a company's pattern of collaboration or location of research, or in the case of Inspec, by Treatment Code, which allows you to distinguish between the various levels of research, e.g., General Review, Theoretical, Applied or practical research. Innography makes it easy With Innography, you can collect and analyze individual or collections of patents that can be further refined by IPC codes. In this example we see the IPC8 for inkjet technology, i.e., B41J. Now it's easy to find and analyze NPL published prior to or since the patent of interest's priority date.
Retirement of DWPI First View (Dialog — File 331) DWPI First View was launched in 2004 to provide faster access to data from new patents not yet available in the main DWPI database. In recent years, however, significant improvements have been made to the timeliness of DWPI. On average, records are now being loaded within 15 days of publication date. While the DWPI timeliness improvements greatly benefit users, they also impact the content and size of DWPI First View. The amount of time patent records are stored in DWPI First View has been considerably reduced, as well as the overall size of DWPI First View in terms of the number of patents in the file at any particular time. These factors have diminished the value of DWPI First View for customers. The main DWPI database will not be affected by this change, and records will continue to be produced as normal. Alerts running in DWPI First View can be migrated to the main DWPI file to provide a continued alerting service. Please contact the for details.
New coverage in DWPI — French Granted Patents A catch-up plan will be implemented over subsequent DWPI updates to bring the timeliness of the coverage into line with the French applications. The table below details the new coverage of Granted patents and the existing coverage of Applications.
Note: FR-E (Additions up to 1969) and FR-M (Medicaments up to 1979) were previously covered in DWPI.
A Proximal and a Distal Tip
This prioritizing technique is used in everyday life. Whenever I feel like cooking something, I look for the main part of the meal first (like steak) and then purchase a medley of vegetables to go along with the protein. If I like the poblano peppers at the store, then I combine other vegetables that would be appropriate for a Mexican dish, and if the peppers don't look appetizing, then maybe it will be just a steak on the grill with corn on the cob and a baked potato, or maybe just a lot of vegetables to complement the meat in a stew. Thus, the main part of the meal determines the accompanying veggies and starch. The chef's criticism of the cooking student's handling of vegetables made the pupil stew. Some patent searches will involve numerous terms and typically a searcher feels obligated to use every one of them. But, ANDing together too many concepts can quite often lead to zero hits. If it does, then the tendency is to drop one of the important concepts. For example, finding patents on, "Protection from radiation from high-voltage overhead lines in the prevention of cancer," could be broken up into as many as six or so concepts. But, if you were to enter each of these six concepts (protection, radiation, high-voltage, overhead lines, prevention, cancer) and then AND them together, you may miss essential hits. Even fleshing out the concepts (cancer OR neoplasms, protection OR shielding, radiation OR irradiated or ionizing, etc.), and then combining them all together may still miss good hits. "Just watch what I'm doing with my finger," he said pointedly. SELECT CANCER AND OVERHEAD(W)LINE?
SELECT RADIATION AND PROTECT?
SELECT PREVENT? AND HIGH(W)VOLT?
SELECT S1 OR S2 OR S3
So, instead of one statement which may yield zero hits, we end up with a set containing certain specific facets of the search. This could be critical to finding not only peripheral art, but also instances in which patents cover the invention you are looking for but in which obscure terms are used to identify it. And, this could lead to related prior art that might have been missed if you simply combined all of the concepts together at once. And yes, there's a difference between a steak dinner with a baked potato and a bowl of stew.
Keeping you up to date on China Find the company
What's in the news? No matter what country you are targeting for business development, Dialog can provide the company profiles, business, economics, country information and news you need to feel confident when your company looks to open a new market.
|
Free File of the Month — Dialog Global Reporter Discover: Scientific, Technical and Medical Validate: Intellectual Property Content Updates Market: Business & News Content Updates
Add depth to prior art searching with ProQuest Sci-Tech content Now, prior art searchers can go further and take advantage of the powerful deep indexing in ProQuest's CSA Illustrata™. Here researchers can uncover data hidden in tables, graphs and charts in these non-patent literature sources. Within CSA Technology Illustrata and CSA Natural Sciences Illustrata, tables, charts and graphs are indexed so users can locate relevant research with pinpoint accuracy. Traditional article-level and full-text searches do not ordinarily capture information within images.
Special Offer 25% discount on new subscriptions to Professional ABI/INFORM Complete on ProQuest Contact your Dialog account manager for additional details or call the Global Customer Support Team at 1-800-334-2564 (North America) or +00 800 33 34 2564 (Rest of World) or by for more information or to request a free trial.
Take advantage of database features in IMS Company Profiles Cost-saving features include:
For example, get the latest update on Johnson & Johnson; find R&D developments. BEGIN 449 Look for a section called Profile Updates and enter the RANK number, e.g. 32. Enter the desired RANK numbers for R&D Profile listed by therapeutic groups, e.g. 33-44. SELECT S1 AND Sn (n represents the final search set).
Free File of the Month
Chinese patents direct export to Innography
ALA Annual Conference
Training schedule
If you have not done so, take a look at the new Dialog Support Home page. Just click a tab to find all support material, training classes, search aids, "What's New" and account information — all from the same page. You'll want to bookmark this page!
Celebrating our Information Professionals at SLA in New Orleans These information professionals are inspiring examples of achievement, creativity and innovation. They embody the future of information services.
Dialog Search Tip: Finding Canadian companies This sounds like a complicated question, but Dialog and Dun & Bradstreet have made it quite easy not only to quickly gather this data, but also to create a professional-looking report. Recent enhancements to the Dun & Bradstreet files with D&B WorldBase® mean you can accomplish this right in D&B WorldBase® — Canada (File 520).
DataStar Search Tip: Using RSS for Alerts Whenever new Alerts for a channel are available, you will receive an e-mail containing a link. The Alerts are kept in the repository for 30 days; the RSS URL to "pick up" your Alert documents is valid for that period. You can also have ad-hoc search results DELIVERed to view in an RSS reader. Note: RSS in DataStar Classic is a format option of Internet delivery for both Alerts and DELIVERs. Enter document type "S" to receive RSS documents. Why use RSS for Alerts? |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||