keeping up with current research: october 2011 judith pinfold subject librarian for biology and...

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Keeping up with Current Research:October 2011

Judith PinfoldSubject Librarian for Biology and Forestry

Oxford Research Archive• Students registered on

the D.Phil. programme from 1st October 2007 are required to deposit both a print copy (in the Bodleian Library) and a digital copy (in ORA) of their thesis.

http://ora.ox.ac.uk/

http://ora.ox.ac.uk/

http://www.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/ora/oxford_etheses/

WISER session

• WISER: Your thesis, copyright and ORA

• Monday 21 November 9.30 - 10.30am 

• Digital theses are becoming increasingly common worldwide. Oxford DPhil students are required to deposit a copy of their thesis in ORA (Oxford University Research Archive). Find out how to deposit the digital copy of your thesis and what you need to know about rights and other issues.Presenter: Sally Rumsey

Current Awareness Services

• The information explosion during 1950s and 60s gave rise to fears of not being able to keep up to date with the literature and so current awareness services came into being.

• Originally hardcopy and postal services.

• Advent of the internet has vastly improved such services.

ELECTRONIC ALERTING SERVICES (EAS)

EAS make use of e-mail and e-databases.

In the academic community these are usually provided by the Institution and so are free to the end-users.

WARNING : No database is comprehensive and no matter how well you frame your enquiry, an EAS will never be as clever as your brain is at picking out material of interest.

RSS = Really Simple Syndication

• RSS is a family of web feed formats

• A web feed is a data format used for serving users frequently updated content.

• Content distributors syndicate a web feed

thereby allowing users to subscribe to it.

SfX: Oxford University e-Journals – full text

ZETOC : Electronic table of contents: Covers the British Library’s Document Supply Centre’s intake of journals

SCOPUS Science Direct. Updating service for journals mainly from Elsevier

Web of Knowledge: Covers all the ISI Citation databases, Arts & Humanities, Social Science & Science

Databases vs. Search engines• Contents are

indexed by subject specialists

• Subject headings• Limiting functions

e.g. publication types, language

Allow you to • View Search history• Combine searches• Mark and sort

results• Print/save/email/

export• Save searches• Set up alerts

• Searches done by automated “web crawlers”

• No thesaurus / subject headings – just free text searching

• No limiting functions

• Usually none of

these!

E-Journals

“I didn't check for the hard copy

- so used to getting online access!”

ZETOCBritish Library: Electronic Table of Contents

+++ Broad coverage.Easy to set up.Easy to modify & extend

--- Not so timely as some (it depends on BL receipt of hard copy)

SCOPUSResearch Service from Elsevier

+++Does include MedLine Searches abstracts

Full text links to

Keeping up to date with SCOPUS

Covers journals loaded onto ScienceDirect(but not exclusively)

Includes Abstracts in the searches as well as journal titles, keywords and citations

Can look at the results over the net

Journal and Citation alerts are emailed

Reference Management Systems

• ProCite, Reference Manager and EndNote (works without web access – but software needs to be installed on own machine – charge of c£90 from OUCS)

• RefWorks (web based – access your records anywhere - free to members of university)

• EndNote on the Web (free to members of university, but has limited feature set – designed to be used alongside desktop version)

• Zotero is a free plug-in for Firefox browser (only) – limited but growing capability

So what can reference management software do?

• Store references to items in many different formats and material types• Search, select and output references in a variety of pre-determined

styles, or one of your own making• Import references direct from databases like Scopus or Web of

Knowledge, or library catalogues like SOLO• Search external databases from within the reference management

software, and save references retrieved• Insert references into a word-processed document and format them in a

particular style at the touch of a button• Store links to documents – pdf’s, images – or copies of them within

database

EndNote, EndNote Web & RefWorks compared

Compare features: EndNote

Web EndNoteDesktop RefWorks

Save references + + +

Organize & edit references + + +

Storage capacity (number of references) 10,000 unlimited unlimited

Import from many databases and OPACs + + +

Cite & format papers with bibliographies + + +

Create & save advanced searches + create (not save)

Customize views & displays + +

Edit reference import filters & output styles +RW can add or edit import filters

Users can edit output styles

Use term lists for auto-entry + +

Cite tables, figures, & equations + +

Work Offline (anytime/anywhere) + Write papers offline only

Local Personal Files and Documents + +

High Performance Desktop Environment +  

Reference Management Systems

• For more information on compatibility of different reference management packages, email

Ollie Bridle, Biochemistry Subject Librarian at the RSL

ollie.bridle@bodleian.ox.ac.uk

EndNote system:-

Software package that you purchase from OUCS but you then have it permanently

There is also now a Web version

Courses laid on for both main systems (http://www.oucs.ox.ac.uk)

Web of Knowledge

WEB of Science: ISI citation indexes

Broad Coverage – all subject areas

Run when convenient

Automatic export to EndNotebut now with export to RefWorks

(Journal Citation Reports – help choose the most effective title in your area)

Web of Knowledge

Three ways to keep up to date:

E-mail alert – you can specify a search to be repeated and the results emailed to you at chosen intervals

Saving and rerunning searches – you save a search and run it again in the future

Citation Alert – you will receive an email every time a particular article is cited in another WoK-indexed article

      

                   

Bibliographic Databases

OVIDSP

• CAB Abstracts – biogeography• Forest Science – biogeography• Zoological Abstracts Archive only

(1864-2009)

Bibliographic Databases

ProQuest• Very broad based• ‘Biological science’ component concentrates on:

Biomedicine, biotechnology, zoology and ecology - journal articles

• Coverage 1971-current• 29 databases including: Ecology abstracts, Entomology

abstracts, Animal behaviour abstracts, Plant Science,etc.• Can search individually or by specific databases• Updated monthly

For PubMed, contact Juliet Ralph: juliet.ralph@bodleian.ox.ac.uk

RefWorks for Sciences and Social Sciences

Friday 2 December 9.15 - 12.15pm 

Book via OUCS websitehttp://www.oucs.ox.ac.uk/itlp/courses/summary

WISER session

Bibliographic Databases

Search :- Conservation of Cheetahs 2006-2011 Scopus = 44 articles

W.o.K. = 43 articles

Ovid = 63 after de-duplication of 75 articles, etc.

ProQuest = 36 articles

Total = 227

After RefWorks de-duplication = 77

Further assistance:

This presentation available on-line

http://www.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/science/training/biosciences

More courses available:

http://www.oucs.ox.ac.uk/itlp/

Other presentations

http://www.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/services/training/wiser

Sue.bird@bodleian.ox.ac.uk (environmental sciences)

Oliver.bridle@bodleian.ox.ac.uk (bioinformatics)

Judith.pinfold@bodleian.ox.ac.uk (biological sciences)

Juliet.ralph@bodleian.ox.ac.uk (medical sciences)

Keeping up with current research

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http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/V833GBC

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