MICROBIOLOGY, Faculty of Medicine, Institute of Medical Sciences A

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

MICROBIOLOGY, Faculty of Medicine, Institute of Medical Sciences A FORMAT FOR SUBJECTWISE IDENTIFYING JOURNALS BY THE UNIVERSITIES AND APPROVAL OF THE UGC {Under Clause 6.05 (1) of the University Grants Commission (Minimum Qualifications for appointment of Teacher and Other Academic Staff in Universities and Colleges and Measures for the Maintenance of Standards in Higher Education (4th Amendment), Regulations, 2016} Subject: MICROBIOLOGY, Faculty of Medicine, Institute of Medical Sciences A. Refereed Journals Sl. Name of the Journal Publisher and Year of Hard e-publication ISSN Number Peer / Indexing status. Impact Do you use Any other No. place of Start copies (Yes/No) Refree If indexed, Factor/Rating. any Information publication published Reviewed Name of the Name of the IF exclusion (Yes/No) (Yes/No) indexing data assigning agency. criteria for base Whether covered Research by Thompson & Journals Reuter (Yes/No) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 1 J MOL MICROB BIOTECH, Journal of Basel ; New York : Karger, 1999 Yes e-ISSN: 1660- 1464-1801 Yes Index medicus: 1.701 /Thomson molecular microbiology and biotechnology Switzerland 2412 v1n1,Aug. 1999-; Reuter- Y MEDLINE: v1n1; Aug. 1999-PubMed: v1n1,Aug. 1999- 2 LETT APPL MICROBIOL, Letters in applied Oxford, UK : Published for 1985 Yes Online ISSN: 0266-8254 Yes Index medicus: 1.579/ N microbiology the Society for Applied 1472-765X v26n4,Apr. 1998-; Bacteriology by Blackwell MEDLINE: v26n4,Apr. Scientific Publications, 1998-; PubMed: England v26n4,Apr. 1998- 3 MED MICROBIOL IMMUN, Medical Berlin, New York, 1971 Yes 1432-1831 0300-8584 Yes Index medicus: v157n1, 2.302/ N microbiology and immunology Springer-Verlag, (Electronic) 1971-; MEDLINE: GERMANY v157n1, 1971-; PubMed: v157n1, 1971- 4 METHOD MICROBIOL, Methods in Troy Mo : Academic 1969 Yes 0580-9517 Yes microbiology Press, UNITED STATES 5 MICROB DRUG RESIST, Microbial drug Larchmont, N.Y. : Mary 1995 Yes 1931-8448 1076-6294 Yes Index medicus: 2.529/Thomson resistance (Larchmont, N.Y.) Ann Liebert, UNITED (Electronic) v3n1,spring 1997-; Reuters- Y STATES MEDLINE: v3n1,spring 1997-; PubMed: v3n1,spring 1997- Sl. Name of the Journal Publisher and Year of Hard e-publication ISSN Number Peer / Indexing status. Impact Do you use Any other No. place of Start copies (Yes/No) Refree If indexed, Factor/Rating. any Information publication published Reviewed Name of the Name of the IF exclusion (Yes/No) (Yes/No) indexing data assigning agency. criteria for base Whether covered Research by Thompson & Journals Reuter (Yes/No) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 6 MICROB ECOL, Microbial ecology New York, Springer- 1974 Yes 1432-184X 0095-3628 Yes Index medicus: v43n1, 3.232/ N Verlag, UNITED STATES (Electronic) Jan. 2002-; MEDLINE: v43n1, Jan. 2002-; PubMed: v43n1, Jan. 2002 7 MICROB PATHOGENESIS, Microbial London ; Orlando : 1986 Yes 1096-1208 0882-4010 Yes Index medicus: v1n1, 1.888/Thomson pathogenesis Academic Press, ENGLAND (Electronic) 1986-; MEDLINE: v1n1, Reuters- Y 1986-; PubMed: v1n1, 1986- 8 MICROBES INFECT, Microbes and infection Paris ; New York : Elsevier, 1999 Yes 1769-714X 1286-4579 Yes Index medicus: v1n1, 2.291/Thomson / Institut Pasteur FRANCE (Electronic) Jan. 1999-; MEDLINE: Reuters- Y v1n1, Jan. 1999-; PubMed: v1n1, Jan. 1999- 9 MICROBIOL IMMUNOL, Microbiology and Richmond : Wiley- 1977 Yes 1348-0421 0385-5600 Yes Index medicus: v21n1, 1.428 immunology Blackwell, AUSTRALIA (Electronic) 1977-; MEDLINE: v21n1, 1977-; PubMed: v21n1, 1977- 10 MICROBIOL MOL BIOL R, Microbiology and Washington, DC : 1997 No 1098-5557 1092-2172 Yes Index medicus: v61n1, molecular biology reviews American Society for (Electronic) Mar. 1997-; MEDLINE: 11 MICROBIOL RES, Microbiological research JenaMicrobiology, : G. Fischer, United 1994 Yes 1618-0623 0944-5013 Yes Indexv61n1, medicus: Mar. 1997-; 2.723/Thomson GERMANY (Electronic) v149n1,Apr. 1994-; Reuters- Y MEDLINE: v149n1,Apr. 1994-; PubMed: v149n1,Apr. 1994- Sl. Name of the Journal Publisher and Year of Hard e-publication ISSN Number Peer / Indexing status. Impact Do you use Any other No. place of Start copies (Yes/No) Refree If indexed, Factor/Rating. any Information publication published Reviewed Name of the Name of the IF exclusion (Yes/No) (Yes/No) indexing data assigning agency. criteria for base Whether covered Research by Thompson & Journals Reuter (Yes/No) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 MICROBIOL-SGM, Microbiology (Reading, London : Microbiology 1994 Yes 1465-2080 1350-0872 Yes Index medicus: v140, 2.268 England) Society, England (Electronic) 1994-; MEDLINE: v140, 1994-; PubMed: v140, 1994- 13 MICROBIOLOGY Washington, DC : Kluwer 1957 Yes 0026-2617 Yes Not currently indexed 0.796/N Academic/Plenum for MEDLINE. Publishers, UNITED STATES 14 MOL MICROBIOL, Molecular microbiology Oxford, OX ; Boston, MA : 1987 Yes 1365-2958 0950-382X Yes Index medicus: 3.761/N Blackwell Scientific (Electronic) v1n1,Jul. 1987-; Publications, England MEDLINE: v1n1,Jul. 1987-; PubMed: v1n1,Jul. 1987- 15 MOL PLANT MICROBE IN, Molecular plant- St. Paul, MN : APS Press, 1988 Yes 0894-0282 Yes Index medicus: v1n1, microbe interactions United States 1988-; MEDLINE: v1n1, 1988-; PubMed: v1n1, 1988- 16 NAT REV MICROBIOL, Nature reviews. London, UK : Nature Pub. 2003 Yes 1740-1534 1740-1526 Yes Index medicus: v1n1, 24.727 /Thomson Microbiology Group, England (Electronic) Oct. 2003-; MEDLINE: Reuters- Y v1n1, Oct. 2003-; PubMed: v1n1, Oct. 2003- 17 RES MICROBIOL, Research in microbiology Paris : Elsevier, FRANCE 1989 Yes 1769-7123 0923-2508 Yes Index medicus: 2.154/Thomson (Electronic) v140/n1,Jan. 1989-; Reuters- Y MEDLINE: v140/n1,Jan. 1989-; PubMed: v140/n1,Jan. 1989- Sl. Name of the Journal Publisher and Year of Hard e-publication ISSN Number Peer / Indexing status. Impact Do you use Any other No. place of Start copies (Yes/No) Refree If indexed, Factor/Rating. any Information publication published Reviewed Name of the Name of the IF exclusion (Yes/No) (Yes/No) indexing data assigning agency. criteria for base Whether covered Research by Thompson & Journals Reuter (Yes/No) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 18 REV MED MICROBIOL, Reviews in medical Hagerstown, MD : 1990 Yes 1473-5601 0954-139X Yes PubMed: Selected microbiology Lippincott Williams & (Electronic) citations only; Current Wilkins, UNITED STATES Indexing Status: Not currently indexed for MEDLINE. Only citations for author manuscripts are included. 19 SYST APPL MICROBIOL, Systematic and Stuttgart ; New York : G. 1983 Yes 1618-0984 0723-2020 Yes Index medicus: 3.691/Thomson applied microbiology Fischer Verlag, Germany (Electronic) v21/1,Mar. 1998-; Reuters- Y MEDLINE: v21/1,Mar. 1998-; PubMed: v21/1,Mar. 1998- 20 TRENDS MICROBIOL, Trends in microbiology Cambridge : Elsevier 1993 Yes 1878-4380 0966-842X Yes Index medicus: 9.5/Thomson Trends Journals, England (Electronic) v1n1,Apr. 1993-; Reuters- Y MEDLINE: v1n1,Apr. 1993-; PubMed: v1n1,Apr. 1993- 21 WORLD J MICROB BIOT, World journal of Berlin : Springer, 1990 No 1573-0972 0959-3993 Yes Index medicus: v28n1, 1.532 microbiology & biotechnology GERMANY (Electronic) Jan. 2012-; MEDLINE: v28n1, Jan. 2012-; PubMed: v28n1, Jan. 2012- Sl. Name of the Journal Publisher and Year of Hard e-publication ISSN Number Peer / Indexing status. Impact Do you use Any other No. place of Start copies (Yes/No) Refree If indexed, Factor/Rating. any Information publication published Reviewed Name of the Name of the IF exclusion (Yes/No) (Yes/No) indexing data assigning agency. criteria for base Whether covered Research by Thompson & Journals Reuter (Yes/No) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 22 AM J INFECT CONTROL, American journal of St. Louis, Mosby, United 1980 Yes 1527-3296 0196-6553 Yes Index medicus: v10, 1.995/Thomson infection control States (Electronic) 1982-; MEDLINE: 1980-; Reuters- Y PubMed: 1980-; Hospital literature index: 1980-1994; Hospital and health administration index: 1995-1999 23 BMC INFECT DIS, BioMed Central infectious London : BioMed Central, 2001 No 1471-2334 1471-2334 Yes Index medicus: v1, 2.690/ N diseases England (Electronic) 2001-; MEDLINE: v1, 2001-; PubMed: v1, 2001-, PMC 24 CLIN INFECT DIS, Clinical infectious diseases Oxford : Oxford University 1992 Yes 1537-6591 1058-4838 Yes Index medicus: v14, 8.736/Thomson Press, United States (Electronic) 1992-; MEDLINE: Reuters- Y v14,1992-; PubMed: v14,1992 25 CURR OPIN INFECT DIS, Current opinion in Hagerstown, Md. : 1988 Yes 1473-6527 0951-7375 Yes Index medicus: v14n1, infectious diseases Lippincott Williams & (Electronic) Feb. 2001-; MEDLINE: Wilkins, United States v2n1, Feb. 1989,v14n1, Feb. 2001-; PubMed: v2n1,Feb. 1989,v14n1, Feb. 2001- 26 EMERG INFECT DIS, Emerging infectious Atlanta, GA : National 1995 Yes 1080-6059 1080-6040 Yes Index medicus: v1n1, 6.99/Thomson diseases Center for Infectious (Electronic) 1995-; MEDLINE: v1n1, Reuters- Y Diseases, Centers for 1995-; NLM Gateway Disease Control and meeting abstracts; Prevention (CDC), United PubMed: v1n1, 1995-, States PMC Sl. Name of the Journal Publisher and Year of Hard e-publication ISSN Number Peer / Indexing status. Impact Do you use Any other No. place of Start copies (Yes/No) Refree If indexed, Factor/Rating. any Information publication published Reviewed Name of the Name of the IF exclusion (Yes/No) (Yes/No) indexing data assigning agency. criteria for base Whether covered Research by Thompson & Journals Reuter (Yes/No) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 27 EPIDEMIOL INFECT, Epidemiology and Cambridge Eng : 1987 No 1469-4409 0950-2688 Yes Index medicus: v98n1, 2.515/Thomson infection Cambridge University (Electronic) Feb. 1987-; MEDLINE: Reuters- Y Press, England v98n1, Feb. 1987-; PubMed: v98n1, Feb. 1987-; PMC Inactive 28 INFECT CONT HOSP EP, Infection control Cambridge : Cambridge 1988 Yes 1559-6834 0899-823X Yes Index medicus: v9n2 3.669/Thomson and hospital epidemiology University Press, United (Electronic) ,Feb. 1988-; MEDLINE: Reuters- Y States v9n2, Feb. 1988-; International nursing index: v9n2, Feb. 1988- v21n5, May 2000; PubMed: v9n2, Feb. 1988- 29 INFECT DIS CLIN N AM, Infectious disease Philadelphia : Elsevier 1987 Yes 1557-9824 0891-5520 Yes Index medicus: clinics of North America Health Sciences Division, (Electronic) v1n1,Mar.
Recommended publications
  • Biomedical Text Mining: a Survey of Recent Progress
    Chapter 14 BIOMEDICAL TEXT MINING: A SURVEY OF RECENT PROGRESS Matthew S. Simpson Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications United States National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health [email protected] Dina Demner-Fushman Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications United States National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health [email protected] Abstract The biomedical community makes extensive use of text mining tech- nology. In the past several years, enormous progress has been made in developing tools and methods, and the community has been witness to some exciting developments. Although the state of the community is regularly reviewed, the sheer volume of work related to biomedical text mining and the rapid pace in which progress continues to be made make this a worthwhile, if not necessary, endeavor. This chapter pro- vides a brief overview of the current state of text mining in the biomed- ical domain. Emphasis is placed on the resources and tools available to biomedical researchers and practitioners, as well as the major text mining tasks of interest to the community. These tasks include the recognition of explicit facts from biomedical literature, the discovery of previously unknown or implicit facts, document summarization, and question answering. For each topic, its basic challenges and methods are outlined and recent and influential work is reviewed. Keywords: Biomedical information extraction, named entity recognition, relations, events, summarization, question answering, literature-based discovery C.C. Aggarwal and C.X. Zhai (eds.), Mining Text Data, DOI 10.1007/978-1-4614-3223-4_14, 465 © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2012 466 MINING TEXT DATA 1.
    [Show full text]
  • MEDLINE® Comprehensive Biomedical and Health Sciences Information
    ValuaBLE CONTENT; HIGhly FOCUSED seaRCH capaBILITIES MEDLINE® COMPREHENSIVE BIOmedical AND health SCIENCES INFORmatiON WHAT YOU’LL FIND WHAT YOU CAN DO • Content from over 5,300 journals in • Keep abreast of vital life sciences information 30 languages, plus a select number of • Uncover relevant results in related fields relevant items from newspapers, magazines, and newsletters • Identify potential collaborators with significant citation records • Over 17 million records from publications worldwide • Discover emerging trends that help you pursue successful research and grant acquisition • Approximately 600,000 records added annually • Target high-impact journals for publishing • Links from MEDLINE records to the valuable your manuscript NCBI protein and DNA sequence databases, and to PubMed Related Articles • Integrate searching, writing, and bibliography creation into one streamlined process • Direct links to your full-text collections • Fully searchable and indexed backfiles to 1950 • Full integration with ISI Web of Knowledge content and capabilities GLOBAL COVERAGE AND SPECIALIZED INDEXING ACCESS THE MOST RECENT INFORMAtion — AS MEDLINE is the U.S. National Library of Medicine® WELL AS BACKFILES TO 1950 (NLM®) premier bibliographic database, covering Discover the most recent information by viewing biomedicine and life sciences topics vital to biomedical MEDLINE In-Process records, recently added records practitioners, educators, and researchers. You’ll find that haven’t yet been fully indexed. And track nearly 60 coverage of the full range of disciplines, such as years of vital backfile data to find the supporting — or medicine, life sciences, behavioral sciences, chemical refuting — data you need. More backfiles give you the sciences, and bioengineering, as well as nursing, power to conduct deeper, more comprehensive searches dentistry, veterinary medicine, the health care system, and track trends through time.
    [Show full text]
  • Information-Seeking Behavior in Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM): an Online Survey of Faculty at a Health Sciences Campus*
    Information-seeking behavior in complementary and alternative medicine (CAM): an online survey of faculty at a health sciences campus* By David J. Owen, M.L.S., Ph.D. [email protected] Education Coordinator, Basic Sciences Min-Lin E. Fang, M.L.I.S. [email protected] Information Services Librarian Kalmanovitz Library and Center for Knowledge Management University of California, San Francisco San Francisco, California 94143-0840 Background: The amount of reliable information available for complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) is limited, and few authoritative resources are available. Objective: The objective is to investigate the information-seeking behavior of health professionals seeking CAM information. Methods: Data were gathered using a Web-based questionnaire made available to health sciences faculty af®liated with the University of California, San Francisco. Results: The areas of greatest interest were herbal medicine (67%), relaxation exercises (53%), and acupuncture (52%). About half the respondents perceived their CAM searches as being only partially successful. Eighty-two percent rated MEDLINE as a useful resource, 46% personal contacts with colleagues, 46% the Web, 40% journals, and 20% textbooks. Books and databases most frequently cited as useful had information about herbs. The largest group of respondents was in internal medicine (26%), though 15% identi®ed their specialties as psychiatry, psychology, behavioral medicine, or addiction medicine. There was no correlation between specialty and patterns of information- seeking behavior. Sixty-six percent expressed an interest in learning more about CAM resources. Conclusions: Health professionals are frequently unable to locate the CAM information they need, and the majority have little knowledge of existing CAM resources, relying instead on MEDLINE.
    [Show full text]
  • Exploring Biomedical Records Through Text Mining-Driven Complex Data Visualisation
    medRxiv preprint doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.03.27.21250248; this version posted March 29, 2021. The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. All rights reserved. No reuse allowed without permission. Exploring biomedical records through text mining-driven complex data visualisation Joao Pita Costa Luka Stopar Luis Rei Institute Jozef Stefan Institute Jozef Stefan Institute Jozef Stefan Ljubljana, Slovenia Ljubljana, Slovenia Ljubljana, Slovenia [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Besher Massri Marko Grobelnik Institute Jozef Stefan Institute Jozef Stefan Ljubljana, Slovenia Ljubljana, Slovenia [email protected] [email protected] ABSTRACT learning technologies that have been entering the health domain The recent events in health call for the prioritization of insightful at a slow and cautious pace. The emergencies caused by the recent and meaningful information retrieval from the fastly growing pool pandemics and the need to act fast and accurate were a motivation of biomedical knowledge. This information has its own challenges to fast forward some of the modernization of public health and both in the data itself and in its appropriate representation, enhanc- healthcare information systems. Though, the amount of available ing its usability by health professionals. In this paper we present information and its heterogeneity creates obstacles in its usage in a framework leveraging the MEDLINE dataset and its controlled meaningful ways. vocabulary, the MeSH Headings, to annotate and explore health- related documents. The MEDijs system ingests and automatically annotates text documents, extending their legacy metadata with MeSH Headings.
    [Show full text]
  • 28 Practical Dermatology March 2008
    he influence of “the literature” on daily medical ings from a Merck-sponsored study of rofecoxib, alleging that practice is incalculable. Through it, researchers manuscript authors suppressed evidence of cardiac effects caused share and pursue additional avenues of discovery, by the medication. Certainly peer reviewers can assess the infor- while clinicians uncover the latest information mation presented in a publication, but they cannot know what about new patient care strategies. Without pub- relevant information is not presented. Tlished studies documenting the efficacy of new drugs, physicians According to the International Committee of Medical would be hard-pressed to adopt them into practice. Every clini- Journal Editors (ICMJE), a peer-reviewed journal is “one that cian has at some point mined the literature for clues to the diag- submits most of its published research articles for outside nosis or management of a challenging case. The literature can review.” The group of general medical journal editors whose par- even influence insurance coverage decisions, as companies deter- ticipants meet annually and produce the Uniform Requirements mine broad policies and decide case-by-case coverage based on for Manuscripts (URM), acknowledges that, “The number and available published evidence. kind of manuscripts sent for review, the number of reviewers, the It is incumbent upon physicians to keep abreast of the litera- reviewing procedures, and the use made of the reviewers’ opin- ture relevant to their field of practice. Yet familiarity with med- ions may vary. In the interests of transparency, each journal ical journals may breed complacency; those who depend on should publicly disclose its policies in its instructions to these publications may take for granted the quality of informa- authors.” Among US journals, both the Journal of the American tion presented in the canon of the literature while unduly dis- Academy of Dermatology and Archives of Dermatology follow the missing other worthy sources of pertinent, quality information.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Application of Text Mining to Biomedical Knowledge Extraction: Analyzing Clinical Narratives and Medical Literature
    Amy Neustein, S. Sagar Imambi, Mário Rodrigues, António Teixeira and Liliana Ferreira 1 Application of text mining to biomedical knowledge extraction: analyzing clinical narratives and medical literature Abstract: One of the tools that can aid researchers and clinicians in coping with the surfeit of biomedical information is text mining. In this chapter, we explore how text mining is used to perform biomedical knowledge extraction. By describing its main phases, we show how text mining can be used to obtain relevant information from vast online databases of health science literature and patients’ electronic health records. In so doing, we describe the workings of the four phases of biomedical knowledge extraction using text mining (text gathering, text preprocessing, text analysis, and presentation) entailed in retrieval of the sought information with a high accuracy rate. The chapter also includes an in depth analysis of the differences between clinical text found in electronic health records and biomedical text found in online journals, books, and conference papers, as well as a presentation of various text mining tools that have been developed in both university and commercial settings. 1.1 Introduction The corpus of biomedical information is growing very rapidly. New and useful results appear every day in research publications, from journal articles to book chapters to workshop and conference proceedings. Many of these publications are available online through journal citation databases such as Medline – a subset of the PubMed interface that enables access to Medline publications – which is among the largest and most well-known online databases for indexing profes- sional literature. Such databases and their associated search engines contain important research work in the biological and medical domain, including recent findings pertaining to diseases, symptoms, and medications.
    [Show full text]
  • PATHOLOGY, Faculty of Medicine, Institute of Medical Sciences A
    FORMAT FOR SUBJECTWISE IDENTIFYING JOURNALS BY THE UNIVERSITIES AND APPROVAL OF THE UGC {Under Clause 6.05 (1) of the University Grants Commission (Minimum Qualifications for appointment of Teacher and Other Academic Staff in Universities and Colleges and Measures for the Maintenance of Standards in Higher Education (4th Amendment), Regulations, 2016} Subject: PATHOLOGY, Faculty of Medicine, Institute of Medical Sciences A. Refereed Journals Sl. Name of the Journal Publisher and Year of Hard e-publication ISSN Number Peer / Indexing status. Impact Do you use Any other No. place of Start copies (Yes/No) Refree If indexed, Factor/Rating. any Information publication published Reviewed Name of the Name of the IF exclusion (Yes/No) (Yes/No) indexing data assigning agency. criteria for base Whether covered Research by Thompson & Journals Reuter (Yes/No) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 1 Acta cytologica Karger, Basel 1957 Yes Yes 0001-5547(Print); Yes Indexed (Index 1.562 (Impact (Switzerland) 1938- medicus, Medline, Factor by Thomson 2650(Electronic); Pubmed) Reuters) 0001-5547(Linking) 2 Acta oncologica Informa Healthcare, 1987 No Yes 0284-186X(Print); Yes Indexed (Index 3.730 (Impact London (England) 1651- medicus, Medline, Factor by Thomson 226X(Electronic); Pubmed) Reuters) 0284-186X(Linking) 3 Advances in anatomic pathology Lippincott Williams 1994 Yes Yes 1072-4109(Print); Yes Indexed (Index 2.919 (Impact & Wilkins, 1533- medicus, Medline, Factor by Thomson Hagerstown, MD 4031(Electronic); Pubmed) Reuters) 1072-4109(Linking) 4 American journal of clinical oncology Lippincott Williams 1982 Yes Yes 0277-3732(Print); Yes Indexed (Index 2.977 (Impact & Wilkins, 1537- medicus, Medline, Factor by Thomson Hagerstown, MD 453X(Electronic); Pubmed) Reuters) 0277-3732(Linking) Sl.
    [Show full text]
  • Using Pubmed …For Searching the MEDLINE Database
    UUssiinngg PPuubbMMeedd …for searching the MEDLINE database Available online at http://pubmed.gov A condensed version of the National Training Center and Clearinghouse’s NLM Training: PubMed Compiled by New England Region of the National Network of Libraries of Medicine University of Massachusetts Medical School Worcester, MA Reprints: Phone 800-338-7657 July 2004 Searching MEDLINE PubMed Pubmed.gov 1 Searching MEDLINE PubMed TABLE OF CONTENTS PUBLISHER SUPPLIED CITATIONS ....................................................................................................................4 IN PROCESS CITATIONS........................................................................................................................................5 OTHER PUBLISHER SUPPLIED CITATIONS.....................................................................................................5 MEDLINE & MEDLINE CITATIONS ....................................................................................................................5 OLDMEDLINE CITATIONS ....................................................................................................................................6 PUBMED SIDEBAR ...................................................................................................................................................7 SEARCHING WITH PUBMED ................................................................................................................................8 WHAT IS SEARCHED?.............................................................................................................................................8
    [Show full text]
  • Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
    BIOCHEMICAL AND BIOPHYSICAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS AUTHOR INFORMATION PACK TABLE OF CONTENTS XXX . • Description p.1 • Audience p.1 • Impact Factor p.2 • Abstracting and Indexing p.2 • Editorial Board p.2 • Guide for Authors p.4 ISSN: 0006-291X DESCRIPTION . BBRC -- the fastest submission-to-online journal! From Submission to Online in Less Than 3 Weeks! Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications is the premier international journal devoted to the very rapid dissemination of timely and significant experimental results in diverse fields of biological research. The development of the "Breakthroughs and Views" section brings the minireview format to the journal, and issues often contain collections of special interest manuscripts. BBRC is published weekly (52 issues/year). Research Areas now include: • Biochemistry • Bioinformatics • Biophysics • Cancer Research • Cell Biology • Developmental Biology • Immunology • Molecular Biology • Neurobiology • Plant Biology • Proteomics Benefits to authors We also provide many author benefits, such as free PDFs, a liberal copyright policy, special discounts on Elsevier publications and much more. Please click here for more information on our author services. Please see our Guide for Authors for information on article submission. If you require any further information or help, please visit our Support Center AUDIENCE . Biochemists, bioinformaticians, biophysicists, immunologists, cancer researchers, stem cell scientists and neurobiologists. AUTHOR INFORMATION PACK 24 Sep 2021 www.elsevier.com/locate/ybbrc
    [Show full text]
  • Document Clustering of Medline Abstracts for Concept Discovery in Molecular Biology
    Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing 6:384-395 (2001) TEXTQUEST: DOCUMENT CLUSTERING OF MEDLINE ABSTRACTS FOR CONCEPT DISCOVERY IN MOLECULAR BIOLOGY I. ILIOPOULOS, A. J. ENRIGHT, C. A. OUZOUNIS Computational Genomics Group, The European Bioinformatics Institute, EMBL Cambridge Outstation, Cambridge CB10 1SD, UK {ioannis, anton, christos}@ebi.ac.uk We present an algorithm for large-scale document clustering of biological text, obtained from Medline abstracts. The algorithm is based on statistical treatment of terms, stemming, the idea of a ‘go-list’, unsupervised machine learning and graph layout optimization. The method is flexible and robust, controlled by a small number of parameter values. Experiments show that the resulting document clusters are meaningful as assessed by cluster-specific terms. Despite the statistical nature of the approach, with minimal semantic analysis, the terms provide a shallow description of the document corpus and support concept discovery. 1. Introduction The vast accumulation of electronically available textual information has raised new challenges for information retrieval technology. The problem of content analysis was first introduced in the late 60’s [1]. Since then, a number of approaches have emerged in order to exploit free-text information from a variety of sources [2, 3]. In the fields of Biology and Medicine, abstracts are collected and maintained in Medline, a project supported by the U.S. National Library of Medicine (NLM)1. Medline constitutes a valuable resource that allows scientists to retrieve articles of interest, based on keyword searches. This query-based information retrieval is extremely useful but it only allows a limited exploitation of the knowledge available in biological abstracts.
    [Show full text]
  • Journal of Biotechnology
    JOURNAL OF BIOTECHNOLOGY AUTHOR INFORMATION PACK TABLE OF CONTENTS XXX . • Description p.1 • Audience p.1 • Impact Factor p.1 • Abstracting and Indexing p.2 • Editorial Board p.2 • Guide for Authors p.4 ISSN: 0168-1656 DESCRIPTION . Journal of Biotechnology provides a medium for the rapid publication of both full-length articles and short communications on novel and innovative aspects of biotechnology. The Journal will accept papers ranging from genetic or molecular biological positions to those covering biochemical, chemical or bioprocess engineering aspects as well as computer application of new software concepts, provided that in each case the material is directly relevant to biotechnological systems. Papers presenting information of a multidisciplinary nature that would not be suitable for publication in a journal devoted to a single discipline, are particularly welcome. The following areas are covered in the Journal: * Nucleic Acids/Molecular Biology * Physiology/Biochemistry * Biochemical Engineering/Bioprocess Engineering * Industrial Processes/New Products * Medical Biotechnology * Agro- and Food Biotechnology * Genomics and Bioinformatics More information on these areas can be foundhere Benefits to authors We also provide many author benefits, such as free PDFs, a liberal copyright policy, special discounts on Elsevier publications and much more. Please click here for more information on our author services. Please see our Guide for Authors for information on article submission. If you require any further information or help, please visit our Support Center AUDIENCE . Microbiologists, Molecular Biologists, Environmental Scientists, Genetic Engineers. IMPACT FACTOR . 2020: 3.307 © Clarivate Analytics Journal Citation Reports 2021 AUTHOR INFORMATION PACK 28 Sep 2021 www.elsevier.com/locate/jbiotec 1 ABSTRACTING AND INDEXING .
    [Show full text]
  • Front Matter
    ANTICANCER RESEARCH International Journal of Cancer Research and Treatment ISSN: 0250-7005 Volume 40, Number 1, January 2020 Contents Review Current Treatment of Colorectal Liver Metastasis as a Chronic Disease. N.M. DÖRR, M. BARTELS, M.H. MORGUL (Leipzig; Münster, Germany) ......................................................................................................................... 1 Experimental Studies SAHA and EGCG Promote Apoptosis in Triple-negative Breast Cancer Cells, Possibly Through the Modulation of cIAP2. K.L. STEED, H.R. JORDAN, T.O. TOLLEFSBOL (Birmingham, AL, USA) .......................................... 9 Genetic Polymorphisms in IL-10 Promoter Are Associated With Smoking and Prostate Cancer Risk in African Americans. M. ABBAS, T. MASON, A. IBAD, M. KHRAIWESH, V. APPREY, Y. KANAAN, B. WILSON, G. DUNSTON, L. RICKS-SANTI, H. BRIM (Washington, DC; Silver Spring, MD; Hampton, VA, USA) ................. 27 High Expression of c-Met, PKC λ and ALDH1A3 Predicts a Poor Prognosis in Late-stage Breast Cancer. H. MOTOMURA, Y. NOZAKI, C. ONAGA, A. OZAKI, S. TAMORI, T.-A. SHIINA, S. KANAI, C. OHIRA, Y. HARA, Y. HARADA, R. TAKASAWA, T. HANAWA, S.-I. TANUMA, Y. MANO, T. SATO, K. SATO, K. AKIMOTO (Chiba, Japan) ............................................................................................................................................... 35 Targeting Fibroblast Growth Factor Receptor (FGFR) and Phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) Signaling Pathways in Medulloblastoma Cell Lines. S. HOLZHAUSER, M. LUKOSEVICIUTE,
    [Show full text]