14.0637 remarkable eclectic indexing

From: by way of Willard McCarty (willard@lists.village.Virginia.EDU)
Date: Sat Feb 03 2001 - 05:41:50 EST

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                   Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 14, No. 637.
           Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London
                   <http://www.princeton.edu/~mccarty/humanist/>
                  <http://www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/humanist/>

             Date: Sat, 03 Feb 2001 10:33:39 +0000
             From: Gerry McKiernan <gerrymck@IASTATE.EDU>
             Subject: ADS Abstract Service: A Most Remarkable Eclectic Index

              _ADS Abstract Service: A Remarkable Eclectic Index_

          In response to my recent posting for candidates for my new column
    in Library Hi Tech News tentively titled e-Profiles, Michael Kurtz, an
    astronomer and computer scientist with the Smithsonian Astrophysical
    Observatory [ http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/~kurtz/vita.html ]
    reminded me about the ADS Abstract Service of the Astrophysics Data System [
    http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abstract_service.html [See below for
    edited reponse which is re-posted with his permission]

         Upon reading the 'What's New'
    [ http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs_doc/whatsnew.html ] section (as well as
    Michael instructions below) I've concluded that this is perhaps the finest
    example of an Eclectic Index/Abstracting service that I know.

       I defined Eclectic in the context of e-journals in a recent posting:

    "By the "Eclectic Journal", I mean a Web-based resource that at its core
    provides access to e-journals that offer not only access to the conventional
    content of a digital form of a journal but also provides or permits
    interaction with novel and innovative _features and functionalities_ (e.g.,
    reference linking, cross-publisher searching, page customization, open peer
    review, etc.) _AND_ novel and innovative _content_ (e.g., e-Books,
    pre-publication history, electronic discussions, translation services,
    e-prints, bibliographic
    databases, etc.)"
    [ http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/Web4Lib/archive/0101/0131.html ]

        Here's are some the features, functionalities, and content I find noted
    for in the ADS Abstract Service from its 'What's Next' page:

          * Citation indexing
          * Collaborative Filtering
          * Font, Format, and Display Control
          * Database Linking
          * Sorting
          * Data Extraction
          * Access to Dissertations and Theses
          * Personalization
          * FAX Delivery
          * Access to Conference proceedings

    [For examples of some of these features in e-journals, see my EJI(sm)
    registry [ http://www.public.iastate.edu/~CYBERSTACKS/EJI.htm ]

           I invite MyWebColeagues to explore this Most Remarkable Eclectic
    Index at their earliest convenience, if only to test its Collaborative
    Filtering functions and Citation Indexing feature described below.

           Regards,

    /Gerry McKiernan
    Remarkable Eclectic Librarian
    Iowa State University
    Ames IA 50011

    gerrymck@iastate.edu

                                    ****************************

    I saw a note on the **** listserv from you requesting web resources
    for your column.

    Essentially every astronomer uses the NASA ADS Abstract Service
    http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abstract_service.html
    The average use by the average astronomer is more often than once per day.

    For a set of articles describing the system go to:
    http://adsabs.harvard.edu/pubs/A+AS/

    For your column I suggest you look at our use of second order information
    retrieval functions. I believe they are unique in their IR retrieval
    power among literature search facilities.

    I will give you an example of how to use these functions. First go to our
    main query page: http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abstract_service.html. Next
    type "redshift survey" (use the quotes) into the Enter Text Words/Keywords
    window, then click the Send Query button.

    You now should have a list of the most recent 100 papers which contain the
    phrase "redshift survey" in the abstract, title, or keywords, ordered by
    publication date.

    Next page to the bottom of this list and click on the button which says:
    Get also-read lists for all articles in the above list.

    You now have a list of the 500 articles most read (in the last three
    months) by people who read articles from the first list, of recent
    articles on redshift surveys. The list is ordered by how frequently these
    articles were read, thus the list is, in order, those papers currently
    most read by people interested in recent work on redshift surveys.

    Now page to the bottom of this list and click on the button: Get reference
    lists for all articles in the above list.

    You now have a list of papers referenced by the 500 papers most read by
    people interested in redshift surveys, ranked by the number of times they
    were cited. A large number of these papers are not about redshift
    surveys, but they are the most generally useful for people interested in
    redshift surveys. A more specific list to usefulness to redshift surveys,
    as opposed to usefulness to people who are interested in redshift surveys,
    could have been gotten by clicking the return references button after
    getting the results from the first "redshift survey" query.

    Now (finally) go again to the bottom this list and click on the button
    which says: Get citation lists for all articles in the above list. You
    now have a list of those articles which cite the largest number of the
    articles in the previous list, sorted by the number of articles from that
    list which they reference. This is a list of articles with the most
    extensive discussions of topics of interest to people interested in
    redshift surveys. The high number of references found, both as a fraction
    of the papers in an article (49% of the papers referenced in Cole, et al
    were in the previous list, 57% from Cohen, et al), and in absolute terms
    (105 papers from the list were referenced in Ellis' review article, out of
    237 in his reference list) demonstrates clearly that these second order
    query methods work very well.

    So finally, in response to a simple text query for "redshift survey" we
    have four lists

    of papers:

    1. The most recent papers on redshift surveys (What's New?)

    2. The most currently popular papers among people interested in redshift
    surveys (What's Hot?)

    3. The most currently referenced papers by people interested in redshift
    surveys (What's Useful?)

    4. The papers with the most citations to papers useful to people
    interested in redshift surveys (What's Instructional?)

                                      [snip]

    Cheers

    Michael Kurtz

    kurtz@cfa.harvard.edu
    617-495-7434



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