MEDLINE: A Guide to Effective Searching in PubMed and Other InterfacesAshbury Press, 2006 M02 1 - 136 páginas "....a well-written, quick read perfect for medical librarianship students, physicians, and researchers or anyone interested in improving their MEDLINE searching abilities." -- Journal of the Medical Library Association This concise and clearly written book will make your PubMed searches more productive. This completely revised second edition of Brian Katcher's MEDLINE: a guide to effective searching in PubMed and other interfaces promotes the cultivation of an informed and thoughtful approach to searching in PubMed/MEDLINE and other interfaces to MEDLINE. MEDLINE, the National Library of Medicine's on-line bibliographic database, is the premiere index to the world's biomedical literature. It is the primary component of PubMed. MEDLINE is exquisitely organized: each journal article is manually indexed under an average of a dozen Medical Subject Headings (MeSH Terms), one or more publication types, and more. An understanding of this organization is essential to effective searching. Any health professional, health sciences student, or researcher will benefit from reading this book. It explains the basics of formulating searches, shows how to put the main indexing elements in MEDLINE to best use, illustrates the importance of Medical Subject Headings (MeSH), provides guidance for framing questions, and backs everything up with practical examples. MEDLINE: a guide to effective searching in PubMed and other interfaces is an essential resource for those concerned with evidence-based medicine and those engaged in biomedical research. Medical librarians and teachers of medical informatics will find this book to be useful in promoting the careful use of PubMed/MEDLINE. Sometimes simply reading a linear narrative--even on a screen--is a good way to learn. In addition, PubMed offers excellent on-line tutorials. |
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... database that it has always been . More significant changes have occurred ( and will no doubt continue to occur ) in its most widely used interface , PubMed. PubMed provides access to citations in medline (the primary vii.
... citations from journals that are outside of medline's scope, to citations that are in the process of being indexed for medline, and to citations that were indexed before medline's existence. PubMed's other features, including its ...
... citations. Nevertheless, the National Library of Medicine was running more than a thousand searches per month by the end of the 1960s. In 1971, the original magnetic tape-based medlars system was converted to a faster on-line system ...
... citations that are “related” to it, based on the words that appear in the title and abstract and the Medical Subject Headings that were assigned in indexing the citation. Thus, the “related articles” link, a powerful new tool for ...
... citations proffered can be deceiving. More often than not, the list is disap- pointing. It is often either too long ... citation will be provided in Chapter 2. Barnard GW and Abbott C (1963). Information Storage and Retrieval: A Survey ...