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From the Editor We have planned a host of events for the Special Libraries Association annual conference June 12-15, 2011, in Philadelphia. Visit us at ProQuest Dialog booth #900 to check out demonstrations of ProQuest Dialog and learn more about its new features, and be on hand to congratulate Dialog award winners at our annual ceremony. We welcome this opportunity to see and talk with our customers in person, so please do come by! In this issue, you’ll want to read about new features of ProQuest Dialog that aid in searching biomedical research, as well as new content in EconLit, Derwent World Patents Index® and ebrary. As always, we highlight search tips, new training courses and documentation to help you make the most of Dialog and, of course, you don’t want to miss the always entertaining, always informative Ron Kaminecki. This month, he explores the world of prior art searching.
ProQuest Dialog tools for the biomedical searcher Whether you are a power searcher or just getting started, you will appreciate ProQuest Dialog’s latest release featuring new tools for searching MEDLINE®, ToxFile® and Embase®. In Command Line search mode or using the easy menu-driven Thesaurus tool, you can search the online thesauri in these databases to find subject terms to help you broaden or narrow a search. With a thesaurus opened, browse subject terms, or select one or more to add to your search.
Currently, there are 83 drug/medical qualifier terms with 19 “Quick Code” groupings, which allow you to search multiple subjects using a single abbreviation (e.g., QT for Quick Therapy including drug and diet therapy, surgery and more).
In addition, EXPLODE and the ability to qualify the terms to major subjects are available as checkbox options in the thesaurus tool. A new At a Glance module will take you step-by-step through the thesaurus and EXPLODE.
It’s easy on ProQuest Dialog ProQuest Dialog™: Field searching and stacking One of the most powerful features offered by legacy Dialog and DataStar to clients is the ability to search by specific index fields. The precision of the search fields has historically allowed users to cut through lists of results that may not accurately focus on the terms and concepts users have searched. For instance, seasoned searchers understand that relevance and occurrences of terms in strategic locations of documents are prime indicators of an article’s content. In addition, index fields for descriptors of the article, subjects, or events help indicate the main idea of an article. Also, index search fields are a mainstay when searching large sets of data. Given the significance of precise searching, ProQuest Dialog offers several ways to obtain precision depending on your expertise. Whether you use Basic Search, Advanced Search or Command line mode, you can search key fields such as title, abstract, or subject to ensure your terms are the main topics discussed. For example, if you are conducting a search in the Pharmaceutical & Biomedical category for symptoms of anaphylaxis, a food allergy, to find results concerning the causes and treatment, the search might look something like the strategies in the search forms below.
No matter what your level of search expertise, ProQuest Dialog has a way to meet your needs! For more details on different types of searches, view the New Features in ProQuest Dialog on the ProQuest Dialog customer support page.
Join Dialog at SLA festivities!
Sunday, June 12, 3:00 – 3:30 p.m.,ProQuest Booth 900 Tuesday, June 14, 10:00 – 11:30 a.m., Convention Center Room 112B Hot Topic: Speakers
A group site on the ProQuest DiscoverMore Ning site will be used to generate discussion before and after the panel and to display related tweets during the session. If you can’t attend the panel in person, check out the stream by joining at http://discovermorecorps.com/ and use hashcode <#ProQuest> to send your comments and questions to the panelists and audience members during the session! Tuesday, June 14, 9:00 p.m. – Midnight, Marriott Hotel, Salon E Future Disco Dance Party! Sponsored by ProQuest and Dialog Hosted by: SLA and Dialog NOOK eReader SweepstakesEnter the SLA and Dialog Sweepstakes for your chance to receive one of two NOOK Color eReaders . To enter, use these quick and easy steps. (Note: If you're already a Facebook fan of Dialog LLC and SLA, skip steps 1-2.)
Entries will be accepted until June 15, the last day of the SLA 2011 Annual Conference & INFO-EXPO. If you're one of the lucky winners, SLA will notify you via email on June 16, 2011.
Complement Dialog sources with ebrary
ebrary offers a wide variety of flexible models for acquiring e-books from trusted publishers such as Springer, Elsevier, McGraw-Hill, British Informatics Society, IOS Press, OECD, Wiley and other leading publishers. Make research quick and efficient — use ebrary’s cutting-edge technology DASH!™ to create searchable databases of your own digital materials that integrate with ebrary’s content. ebrary Topic of the Week To make it easier for libraries to keep their e-book collections current and timely, ebrary is pleased to introduce Topics of the Week, which highlight premium titles on hot issues hand-picked by its on-staff librarians. Such topics would be the increasingly popular issue of corporate sustainability and how to develop a successful strategy for the company, from risk management to sustainable buildings. Contact your account representative for more information about this exciting new source of information.
Historical data added to EconLit
Historical data provides a basis for analyzing and comparing issues over time, for example, China has seen tremendous changes in the last century. Looking at some titles illustrates population decline and its effects on economic factors, agriculture policy contrasts and rural communes and their place in the Chinese economy, to name just a few issues.
Learn more about this new content in EconLit at the Dialog or AEA booths at the upcoming SLA Conference on June 12-15 in Philadelphia.
DWPI new coverage – Gulf Cooperation Council
The new coverage in DWPI will include all granted patents published from 2002 onwards. DWPI titles and alerting abstracts in English are provided for records identified as basics. Any that are equivalents will join the existing DWPI patent family as normal. EPI and CPI manual codes are applied to relevant records, and other indexing (fragmentation codes, polymer indexing, DCR indexing and/or Markush Indexing) will be applied to basics classified into section A, B, C or E. The first records appeared in DWPI updates early in May. The most recently published records were loaded first, and will be followed by the backfile to 2002 over subsequent weeks. The ongoing content will be loaded as the official gazettes are made available by the GCC patent office. Patent and literature citations from the GCC records will also be captured and included in PCI (Patents Citation Index) increasing further the authority coverage of this file. As well as coordinating efforts in the area of intellectual property, the GCC also encourages scientific and technical research in this region. Increasing levels of R&D spending and investment from companies outside of the region make it important for the GCC patents to be covered in DWPI and PCI. The regional office’s objectives include:
A Proximal and a Distal Tip
Kind of an unconventional way of entering a premises — after all, the socially acceptable means of using a key is preferred, but that assumes one has such a clever device. So, the keyless among us must depend upon unconventional means of obtaining access, and maybe that’s a blessing. After this escapade, I made sure to have spare keys handy. I have often referred to citation searching as akin to jumping through the bathroom window, because it is a somewhat unconventional way of doing research, even though now it is very well accepted. (Using citations, that is, not jumping through a bathroom window.) A database is structured with keywords and often with classified indexing and other standardized data like numbers or codes, but citations just sort of happen without much control by the creators of the databases. Unless you cite yourself (“According to me, I said...”), you really are at the whim of other authors for citing your work. But what if you not only don’t have a key, but you also tried one way and it didn’t work? Citations are great, but what do you do if you don’t have any? This happens quite often in patents when you are looking at a very new technology that has not been around long enough to acquire any citations. At that point, get out the brick and the towel! Or, better yet, consider following the timeline of the invention. By timeline I mean look at the use of a specific search strategy over time and focus on the earliest use of the invention. Complete with microscopic pencil pocket protectors Here we picked up the potential for a new term — nanochopsticks! Better, though, is we can also easily look up the backgrounds of the inventors who are mentioned to see if they have any conference papers, technical reports, etc., mentioning the new technology of nanotweezers. At this point I would look at the bibliography found in the dissertation to attempt to locate pertinent literature that might have an enabling disclosure — obtaining an on-target dissertation is like buying an in-depth literature search! So, instead of using the normally-accessible means of entry, why not break into a basement, jump through a bathroom window or at least check the NPL to look for patent information outside of the normal areas? Use the earliest occurrence of a concept found in a timeline and investigate just before that period to determine what the concept was called before it got its catchy name to see if there are any other clues to earlier publications. Prior art is still prior art, no matter what window you had to smash in order to find it.
Dig into Earth Sciences with Deep Indexing on ProQuest
Earth Science relates to the fields including Geology, Geophysics, Soil Science and Oceanography. Practical applications can relate to monitoring of earthquakes, drilling for oil, civil engineering, monitoring volcanic activity and harnessing geothermal energy. Essential: As the basic building block for Earth Science subscriptions, start with GeoRef on ProQuest. An abstract and index (A&I) database produced by the American Geological Society, GeoRef is available from a variety of other sources such as Dialog. The added value on ProQuest is Deep Indexing and the potential to reach full-text content. ProQuest Exclusive: only ProQuest offers Deep Indexing: Earth Science, with enhanced functionality through more effective searching and over 2.6 million indexed figures and tables. It is included as standard with ProQuest’s GeoRef offering. ProQuest Earth Science Collection ProQuest’s Earth Science Collection comprises Deep Indexing, traditional bibliographic abstracts and ProQuest Earth Science Journals. The additional journals component in ProQuest Earth Science Journals brings well over 400 full-text titles in the Earth Science and Geology field. Find out how you can subscribe to the ProQuest Earth Science Collection. Contact your Dialog account representative or click here. |
ProQuest Dialog tools for the biomedical searcher Join Dialog at SLA festivities! Complement Dialog sources with ebrary Market: Business and News Content Updates Validate: Intellectual Property Content Updates Use DialogClassic Web for smart post-processing – Dialog innovation in action When Dialog created DialogClassic Web™ , it delivered a potent tool for information professionals who need high-speed interaction, precise data and superb print-ready results. DialogClassic Web offers a number of time-saving features:
If speed, accuracy and convenience in post-processing matter, use DialogClassic Web for your Dialog searches, and watch for ways many of these features will carry over with even greater flexibility into ProQuest Dialog. This is just the beginning: as you migrate into ProQuest Dialog, you will find even greater strength in seamlessly selecting, exporting, linking and saving your research work.
ProQuest Dialog Webinars Register now for sessions on ProQuest Dialog to see how it works, help develop your search expertise and learn more about content for biomedical and engineering research.
Legacy Dialog Webinars
Check the ProQuest Dialog customer site for these new materials:
Celebrate Dialog award winners at SLA Dialog will announce the recipient of this year’s Roger K. Summit Scholarship, the 2011 Quantum2 InfoStars and the winner of the Seventh Annual SLA Australia & New Zealand Chapter Information Professional of the Year at SLA. Join Dialog at the ProQuest Dialog booth #900 in the INFO-EXPO hall to toast the winners as walking and talking examples of achievement, creativity and innovation, these information professionals embody the future of information services.
Find demographic information on legacy Dialog Where do you search for demographic information on Dialog? It stands to reason a good bet would be the market-research files, both the trade journal literature collections and the full-text reports, but for the first pass and fast retrieval, try TableBase™ (File 93). TableBase provides statistical tabular information dealing with companies, products, industries, markets and countries. All records contain a table and the originating article when available. As part of the Cengage Gale group of files, TableBase brings excellent indexing to the search experience, including Concept Terms (CT=), Industry (/IN, IN=), Product Names (/PN, PN=) and informative table titles (/TI), which often contain the geographic focus and the main keyword terms. Usually a simple title search will yield the kind of data you seek.
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