Complementary use of the SciSearch database for improved biomedical information searching.
AUTOR(ES)
Brown, C M
RESUMO
The use of at least two complementary online biomedical databases is generally considered critical for biomedical scientists seeking to keep fully abreast of recent research developments as well as to retrieve the highest number of relevant citations possible. Although the National Library of Medicine's MEDLINE is usually the database of choice, this paper illustrates the benefits of using another database, the Institute for Scientific Information's SciSearch, when conducting a biomedical information search. When a simple query about red wine consumption and coronary artery disease was posed simultaneously in both MEDLINE and SciSearch, a greater number of relevant citations were retrieved through SciSearch. This paper also provides suggestions for carrying out a comprehensive biomedical literature search in a rapid and efficient manner by using SciSearch in conjunction with MEDLINE.
ACESSO AO ARTIGO
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=226327Documentos Relacionados
- Automated assembly of protein blocks for database searching.
- Use of thermal image film for demonstrations of computer-assisted searching.
- Searching biomedical databases on complementary medicine: the use of controlled vocabulary among authors, indexers and investigators
- Levels of end-user and mediated searching.
- MEDLINE: A Guide to Effective Searching.