Google Scholar is an internet-based search engine designed to locate scholarly information, including peer-reviewed articles, theses, books, preprints, abstracts, and court opinions from academic publishers, professional societies, online repositories, universities, and other Web sites. This review looks ...
You need different search skills to use an academic search engine like Google Scholar. Use these tips the next time you need to search for papers or scholarly journals.
This search engine provides a simple way to access "peer-reviewed papers, theses, books, abstracts, and articles from academic publishers' sit... M Shultz - 《Journal of the Medical Library Association Jmla》 被引量: 99发表: 2007年 A look at Google Scholar, PubMed, and Scirus: ...
Google is now indexing the full text of ProQuest's scholarly content-initially, peer-reviewed journals and peer-reviewed working papers-in Google Scholar, enabling Google Scholar users to seamlessly discover and access their library's ProQuest collections; users beginning their research in Google Schola...
Search scholarly literature across many disciplines and sources – peer-reviewed papers, theses, books, abstracts and articles, from academic publishers, professional societies, preprint repositories, universities and other scholarly organizations. Google Scholar helps you identify the most relevant published ...
According to Google, Google Scholar [http://scholar.google. com] enables users to "search specifically for scholarly literature, including peer-reviewed papers, theses, books, preprints, s, and technical reports from all broad areas of research." Released in November 2004, Google Scholar ...
COREis a not-for-profit service with the aim of becoming the world’s largest aggregator of open-access journals and peer-reviewed papers on the web. It hasover 200 millionscholarly articles gathered from 11,000 data providers, connecting you with multiple research repositories from universities ...
Google Scholar was developed to provide "a simple way to broadly search for scholarly literature" across many sources (e.g. peer-reviewed papers, books, academic publishers, and universities) [17]. However, further details are not provided; for example, the sources or the search algorithms ...
When faculty members are evaluated, they are judged in part by the impact and quality of their scholarly publications. While all academic institutions look to publication counts and venues as well as the subjective opinions of peers, many hiring, tenure, and promotion committees also rely on cita...
The article examines the quality of the Google Scholar electronic reference source. Google Scholar, introduced in beta form in November 2004, already has everyone talking. People wonder how scholarly the material is, whether it will put commercial information retrieval systems out of business, and if...