public marks

PUBLIC MARKS from parmentierf with tags bibliographie & science

February 2008

WorldWideScience

WorldWideScience.org is a global science gateway—accelerating scientific discovery and progress through a multilateral partnership to enable federated searching of national and international scientific databases.

March 2007

January 2007

InternetActu.net » A partir de quand, et jusqu’où peut-on “libérer” les publications scientifiques ?

La publication, dans des archives ouvertes, ou “Libres“, des recherches financées sur fonds publics, gagne du terrain.

techXtra - wwww.techXtra.ac.uk

(via)
Find articles, key websites, books, the latest industry news, job announcements, ejournals, eprints, technical reports, the latest research, thesis & dissertations and more! In Engineering, Mathematics, and Computing

November 2006

World Universities' ranking on the Web: Home

The major innovation of the current edition is the incorporation of Scholar data to the calculation of the Webometrics Rank (WR). During this year we have performed several experiments to improve the correlation between bibliometric and webometric data, testing different web indicators. Finally we decided to recover the WebIF ratio of 1:1 (visibility/size) in the WR calculation, adding the Scholar rank as described in the methodology.

June 2006

HubMed

by 2 others (via)
Quick access to searches with a Firefox search plugin or a HubMed bookmarklet (drag to your browser's bookmarks toolbar). Export citations in RIS, BibTeX, RDF and MODS formats, or directly to RefWorks. Unzip HubMed's import filter into Endnote's Filters folder for direct import into Endnote, or install the RIS Export plugin for direct import into ProCite, RefMan and older versions of Endnote. Use the Citation Finder to convert reference lists from PDFs into search results. Create lists of closely related papers using Rank Relations, then visualise and browse clusters of related papers using TouchGraph (requires Java). Graph occurrences of keywords in published papers over time. Tag and store annotated metadata for articles of interest.

April 2006

Connotea: about

by 2 others
Connotea is a place to keep links to the articles you read and the websites you use, and a place to find them again. It is also a place where you can discover new articles and websites through sharing your links with other users. By saving your links and references to Connotea they are instantly on the web, which means that they are available to you from any computer and that you can point your friends and colleagues to them. In Connotea, every user's links are visible both to visitors and to every other user, and different users' libraries are linked together through the use of common tags or common bookmarks.

March 2006

INIST- Rencontres des Professionnels de l’IST

Le site des Rencontres des Professionnels de l'Information Scientifique et Technique 2006.

September 2005

OpenURL and Metasearch: New Standards, Current Innovations, and Future Directions - National Information Standards Organization (NISO)

NISO's OpenURL standard and Metasearch technologies are complementary tools that can powerfully improve the experience of today's information seeker. This series of workshops will take you from the foundations to the cutting edge of these new directions in information technology. Don't miss this opportunity to learn from leading experts and innovators.

June 2005

Science Research Portal - Search Page

a free, publicly available web portal allowing access to numerous scientific journals and public science databases. It allows students, teachers, professors, researchers, and the general public to access pertinent science information quickly and easily.

April 2005

SCIgen - An Automatic CS Paper Generator

by 4 others (via)
SCIgen is a program that generates random Computer Science research papers, including graphs, figures, and citations. It uses a hand-written context-free grammar to form all elements of the papers. Our aim here is to maximize amusement, rather than coherence. One useful purpose for such a program is to auto-generate submissions to "fake" conferences; that is, conferences with no quality standards, which exist only to make money. A prime example, which you may recognize from spam in your inbox, is SCI/IIIS and its dozens of co-located conferences (for example, check out the gibberish on the WMSCI 2005 website). Using SCIgen to generate submissions for conferences like this gives us pleasure to no end. In fact, one of our papers was accepted to SCI 2005! See Examples for more details.

December 2004