Session coordinator: Péter Jacsó, University of Hawaii - Department of Information and Computer Sciences, USA
Where: 21. 5., 13.00 - 16.00, CERGE, Politických vězňů 7, 2nd floor, room no. 7
The concept of searching based on cited and citing references has been advocated since the 1950s, but until very recently it’s been available for scholarly literature searching only in the databases of the Institute for Scientific Information.
In the past few years several other indexing/abstracting and full text databases have been enhanced by cited references, including also the digital archives of some of the major scholarly publishers. Google Scholar (based on the model of autonomous citation indexing in the CiteSeer/ResearchIndex database) made citation-based searching widely popular by virtue of its open access - in spite of its significant content limitations and software deficiencies.
Searching by cited references and creating derivative bibliometric information, such as the absolute and relative citedness count of articles, offering links to citing papers, and to related articles based on the extent of common cited references, represent one of the most distinctive set of features of advanced search technology. Beyond the software capabilities much depends on the quantity and quality of cited references included in the database. For educated searching, information professionals must be aware of the strengths and weaknesses of the citation-enhanced and citation-based databases.
The tutorial explains, reviews and illustrates the pros and cons, and the major content and software criteria related to the use of cited/citing references in the three largest multidisciplinary databases: Web of Science, Scopus, Google Scholar, and in the digital collections of some scholarly publishers.
The tutorial will be led by dr. Péter Jacsó.
This tutorial is organized in cooperation with CERGE-EI.
Session coordinator: Peter Godwin, University of Bedfordshire
Where: 21. 5., 10.00 - 13.00, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Narodni 3, room no. 108
Instead of asking how Web 2.0 will affect our services, we should discover what it means for us! It is crucial that we grasp the technology urgently.This workshop will introduce you to the main tools (including blogs, wikis, RSS feeds, social.bookmarking, social networks, mashups, podcasts, YouTube, flickr) and how they can change your professional lives.
The workshop will be led by Mr. Peter Godwin.
The workshop is organized in cooperation with the Library of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic.