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From the Editor The new ProQuest Dialog™ now combines the ease of use of a Web search engine with the sophistication and power of Dialog set searching, controlled vocabulary and proximity. In our ProQuest Dialog Updates, learn more about a new feature in ProQuest Dialog that will help you easily match authors with their affiliations. You can also read about the unique content in World News Connection, Dialog's free file for April. And, on the support side, check out the new training sessions, and take a peek at the upcoming ProQuest Dialog Support Center—all in this issue!
Tracking author affiliation easier than ever ProQuest Dialog offers several features that foster collaboration between colleagues within an organization. But what about facilitating collaboration between unassociated researchers? Determining an author's specific affiliation provides many opportunities — whether for a scientist hoping to find others working in a field of interest for possible collaborative research, a legal firm looking for an expert witness, a research division seeking key opinion leaders or even recruiters looking for potential new employees. Some organizations also use author-affiliation matching as a means to create current bibliographies for their authors. STM databases don't usually offer the ability to pinpoint an author in this manner. They generally track just the first author or correspondence/reprint author. However, a number of scientific and technical databases on ProQuest Dialog include specific author-affiliation matching within the body of full-text records—a real bonus! Try this feature, available in databases including Embase®, SciSearch®: a Cited Science Reference Database, PASCAL, Inspec® and Ei Compendex®.
Coming soon! ProQuest Dialog Support Center
It's easier on ProQuest Dialog Quickly find developing technologies
and trends PepsiCo research example
With just a few subject searches in ProQuest Dialog scientific content and business trade literature, this searcher uncovered just the information he set out to find, and it was all made simple with easy-to-use search tools incorporated into the ProQuest Dialog interface.
Free File of the Month — World News Connection (WNC) In today's interconnected global economy, it is more important than ever for businesses to be familiar with the different philosophies, world outlooks, and thinking processes of other peoples in order to be successful in the international arena. World News Connection (WNC) (File 985), a foreign news service compiled by Open Source Center (OSC) from the U.S. Government and produced by National Technical Information Service (NTIS), is just such a source.
As you can see, World News Connection provides truly unique information about countries around the world including those that may not be covered anywhere else. Review the overview of WNC and register for Finding Worldwide Business Intelligence and News on Dialog on April 6 and 20 to learn more about the database. Try File 985 in April for free up to $100 (either DialUnits or connect time; output and Alert costs are not included.) to expand your sources for global news!
World News Connection: Unique sources, local perspective, timely coverage, quick translations Do you need to find information from local sources about a country like Egypt that is in political turmoil before sending your people there? Can you find out the local impact of a natural disaster, such as the tsunami that hit Japan in March and the resulting nuclear repercussions? These are only some of the issues covered by World News Connection (WNC) on Dialog. Unique perspective and content
Step 1: We'll conduct a search in the World News Connection Web version. We'll enter our search terms NUCLEAR POWER OR RADIATION in the Headlines box and limit to records dated 20110317. Step 2: This simple search retrieves articles, translated into English if necessary, from such sources as Czech Happenings, Khom Chat Luek and Khao Sot (Thailand), Interfax, Yonhap (South Korea), The Telegraph Online (India). Sources such as these are otherwise unavailable in the United States.
Updated multiple times, WNC provides timely, unique information. This is just one example. Give it a try yourself Simplified Web interface As one U.S. newspaper claims, "all the news that's fit to print" — and then some.
2011 reloads completed on biomedical files
CLAIMS databases reload with new Green Technology Indexing CLAIMS®/U.S. Patents databases (Files 340, 341, 942) have been updated with all of the 2010 reload enhancements through July 29, 2010. This 2010 release includes the following enhancements:
Keeping an eye on future technology: Find new players with DWPI and PCI Using Derwent World Patent Index® (DWPISM) (File 351) and Derwent Patent Citation Index® (DPCISM) (File 342) together can help you find new players and technologies in a given space. Take a look below to see how you can use these files to find exactly what you are looking for, just as we did in this example dealing with lane deviation. Here are the steps:
Compare the DWPI rank to the rank from DPCI to find new players. In the RANK PANAME results Toyota was the top assignee. RANKing the Citing patent assignee name helps you find new organizations that are inventing in the same technologies. Additional players in the lane deviation field are highlighted. RANK No. Items Term
-------- ----- ----
1 981 DONNELLY CORP
2 387 SCHOFIELD K
3 340 GENTEX CORP
4 338 BOSCH GMBH ROBERT
5 241 MARVELL INT LTD
6 202 DAIMLERCHRYSLER AG
7 181 VOLKSWAGEN AG
8 168 NISSAN MOTOR CO LTD
Exit the RANK list and look at new patent records. In this search we're looking for Donnelly Corp. citing top assignee Toyota (S3 in previous results). ?s co=donnelly/cg and s3 and pa=toyota
5733 CO=DONNELLY/CG
1793 S3
S4 983 CO=DONNELLY/CG AND S3
Now you can TYPE records with Donnelly Corp. as the Citing Patent and select a record such as patent US 7771061 representing the new related technology from Donnelly Corp.
A Proximal and a Distal Tip
Yes, maybe I am overly-literal and should have considered the total scope of a travel agent's services would include actually having the correct spelling of my name for ticketing purposes. And, in the context of booking flights, while the question could have been phrased better, I should have looked at the totality of the circumstances to actually answer the implied question. Such are the problems of focusing on individual points of speech that can vary the meaning of what is being described. Different parts of a patent relay different information based upon the intent of the patent drafter. The title is quite often a quick description that will just barely satisfy the examiner's criticism, but the claims depend upon the context of the entire document. Claims, being the legal part of the document, outline the legal metes and bounds of the invention the applicant is trying to protect, and as such have to be taken in context with the description of the invention found in the rest of the patent (especially in the section of the patent titled, "Detailed Description of the Invention" — yes, some of us need such section headings so we don't misinterpret some things too literally!). An item cannot be mentioned for the first time in the claims as it must have been mentioned elsewhere in the document or else that claim can be rejected as having no antecedent basis. This is why many practitioners draft the claims first, and then copy them into the abstract and finally, break the longish claim language into shorter sentences. This way, the practitioners are guaranteed every word in the claims will have an antecedent basis. And, this is also why some abstracts are really difficult to read. Just look for the word, "said" (a legalese term meaning, "the") in the abstract field, and you will locate more than 400,000 abstracts that were apparently just lifted from the claims. I am
"d-u-n" dun with this search; I like to spell things out to make
sure no one is confused So, psych out the inventor AND the patent drafter. What are they trying to say? A significant patent may have an insignificant title and abstract. For example, US 5,273,995, one of the significant patents for the creation of Lipitor (currently the single drug with the most sales in the world at over US$12 billion/year) is titled with just the scientific name of the drug (I'll spare you the details but there is a lot of what looks like chickenwire). The fact this drug can be used for lowering cholesterol does not appear until five paragraphs into the specification under the section titled, "Summary of the Invention," where the word "hypocholesterolemic" appears. Is this language arcane, obfuscatory, misleading...or proper? A search in the title or abstract fields for words like LOWERING AND CHOLESTEROL would have missed this essential patent. Another
"Selden" crisis Of course, who could have guessed that Hedy Lamarr's 1942 patent titled "Secret Communication Device" (US 2,292,387) would become the basis for a large segment of non-secret communications in the form of a cell phone standard? Here, future citations help to identify the critical patent because the final use of the technology can be found by the eventual developers of cell phone communications. So, how do you know when you have found the right patent that answers the question posed by the search request? Do check the title and abstract, but also consider the drawings, the class codes, the examples in the specification, the citations and the claims. Just recall the abstracts can be redundant with the claims. And sometimes the title of a patent may not answer the question you were asked, but could still be the right patent. Again, consider the totality of the question in light of the patents found as there may be some interpretation necessary. Indeed, future citations may be the best indication of the eventual use of the invention, but that may be a future column. And, if I do write one on future citations, I'll now be able to self-cite this column. I'll just have to ensure I can spell my own name correctly — a skill I have hopefully mastered.
Pictures illustrate the core of findings — and ProQuest gives you the tools to find them Certain subject categories in the all-new ProQuest Platform provide Deep Indexing, the power to search for figures and tables. Once you give it a try, you'll find that deep indexing is an efficient, precise and relevant way to get the picture that explains the findings. For example, if you subscribe to EconLit in the business category or to databases in the Health & Medicine or Science & Technology areas, you'll find links to Find related figures & tables available on the Results page after a Basic Search. These objects are most often invisible in traditional and full-text searching.
The Figures & Tables Search Results page lists summary information for all the tables and other figures that match your search criteria. Both the matching items and also any documents that include figures and tables are included in the list.
Alternatively, when a searcher clicked on Figures & Tables at the top of the page under the subject name, she found a search form much like the Advanced Search form, with many more options. The searcher started out in the Figures & Tables Search form with the goal of finding only records with figures & tables. ProQuest supplied check boxes for her to specify types of images and gave the ability to set a date range up front. If she wished, she could limit to full-size images. Note: Check the latest issue of ProQuest's A Platform of Innovation newsletter highlighting the new ProQuest platform and features, comments and training on ProQuest Dialog. Subscribe now! |
Tracking author affiliation easier than ever Coming soon! ProQuest Dialog Support Center It’s easier on ProQuest Dialog Free File of the Month — World News Connection (WNC) World News Connection: Unique sources, local perspective, timely coverage, quick translations Discover: Engineering & Technical Content Updates Validate: Intellectual Property Content Updates
Save strategies on recurring topics Do you have an ongoing research project you need to update from time to time? Develop a search strategy that works and SAVE it on Dialog. Then EXECUTE it every time you need to update your research. Your search may concern developing technologies. It may involve post-market surveillance of a launched drug. Or it could be a competitor watch. You can execute saved searches on Dialog in any database. Just make sure the fields used in the strategy match the fields in the databases in which you wish to execute the search. After executing a saved search, qualify the final set to a date range encompassing the beginning and final UPDATE (UD=) dates you wish to retrieve. For example, to pick up all the records that were added to the database since the last time you executed the strategy, SELECT Sn AND UD=20110215:20110401. You want not just records published during this time, but any record loaded into the file during the intervening weeks. For projects and competitive intelligence,
you may need to research on a periodic basis, such as daily, weekly,
bi-weekly or monthly. In this case, consider setting up current awareness Alerts. Alerts are saved searches you set up to run
automatically and deliver to your desktop. They are charged at a fixed
price each time they run in a database (daily, weekly, semi-monthly,
monthly or custom-scheduled). Use LIMITALL to restrict searching and retrieval to the desired timeframe. Then EXECUTE the saved search.
Keep up to date with Dialog—check our new blog, sent a tweet or add a comment to Facebook. Process change to order articles from Infotrieve Due to the migration of Infotrieve to
an OpenURL platform, customers who order articles through our interface,
using Infotrieve as a supplier, must now be set up in elinks by March
30, 2011 to be able to continue to use the service. Just send an email
request titled "Infotrieve OpenURL Set-up Request" to dialog.globalcontracts@dialog. Events
Review the April training calendar for new classes. ProQuest Dialog sessions
Sessions for engineering and biomedical professionals will also be offered in April. Additional sessions will be added throughout April, so check the training schedule and register. Dialog Webinars
View the updated ProQuest Dialog FAQs for details about ProQuest Dialog.
Learn about the 2011 Roger K. Summit scholarship The Roger K. Summit Scholarship, awarded annually by Dialog, was established to honor Dr. Roger K. Summit, the founder of Dialog, for his outstanding contributions to the field of information science. In 2011, the Roger K. Summit Scholarship will be open to all Library and Information Science (LIS) students worldwide who are currently enrolled in a library and information science program. The scholarship recipient, who must have demonstrated outstanding interest or performance in electronic information services, is selected based upon the following criteria:
Learn more about the scholarship and obtain an application. Applications are due April 30, 2011.
Searching geographic areas in World News Connection WNC is easy to search. Enter country names in the Title and Lead Paragraph fields (/TI,LP) AND the Geographic Name (GN=, /GN). Dialog provides a way to limit retrieval to specified date ranges with the LIMITALL command. This saves searching and browsing time. In this example, we're using LIMITALL to restrict retrieval to records published across four days. Note: You can search regions using RG=. EXPAND using the prefix RG= to view the different region names.
Some titles emphasize North Korean hold on its non-democratic position. Yonhap: DPRK Tightens Grip on Information
Flow Amid Mideast Turmoil ROK Online Daily: Democratization
Movements Unlikely To Impact DPRK Yonhap: Scholars Say
DPRK Uprising Remains a 'Distant Possibility' ROK Online Daily: Scholars
View Prospects of Democratization in DPRK
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