Research databases You can search forscholarly sourcesonline using databases and search engines likeGoogle Scholar. These provide a range of search functions that can help you to find the most relevant sources. If you are searching for a specific article or book, include the title or the author...
Research databases: A good place to start is with Google Scholar. Also consult the website of your institution’s library to see what academic databases they provide access to. Your institution’s library: Consult your library’s catalog to find relevant sources. Browse the shelves of relevant ...
This article aims to provide a systematic and comprehensive comparison of the coverage of the three major bibliometric databases: Google Scholar, Scopus an... AW Harzing,S Alakangas - 《Scientometrics》 被引量: 145发表: 2016年 The Google Scholar Experiment: How to Index False Papers and Manipul...
However, these databases do not sufficiently cover the humanities and social sciences, and therefore cannot be representative of the total scholarly article output. This study captures the total article output of a country, independent on discipline and provides new insight into open publishing....
INDEXING AND ABSTRACTING IN Austin publishing Group is a member/content provider of the following international databases. One or more journals of Austin Publishing Group are indexed in these databases.Quick Links Home About us Privacy Terms & Conditions Author Guidelines Open Access Submit manuscript ...
The freshness of these databases is a significant issue. As Joann Wleklinski noted in her May/June 2005 ONLINE article (“Studying Google Scholar: Wall to Wall Coverage?,” pp. 22–26), the database used by Google Scholar is static at this point—it’s not adding newer documents. Scholar...
Footnote197 Publishing should, however, be free for researchers, and costs be borne by research institutions or other funders. Researchers are entitled to publish their findings ‘in books, journals and databases of their own choice’.Footnote198 This must also include the right not to publish a...
PubMed is the biggest source of free on-line scientific journals. Also try scholar.Google.com, click on "all X versions" sometimes pdf’s are posted. Also try your local public library.— Kimberly WuilfertThere are different databases for different subjects. Make sure you are seeking in ...
Libre Open Accesssignifies removal both of the price barrier and at least some of the permission barriers limiting reuse, giving rights to text-mine and re-use the article. Thus, while both imply ‘free’ (a potentially ambiguous word),Gratis Open Accessequates to ‘free as in beer’, whil...
Full Article January 20th, 2015 Accessible Archives Retains Scholarly iQ to Upgrade COUNTER Usage Reporting Capabilities Malvern, PA (January 20, 2015) -- Accessible Archives, Inc., a publisher of electronic full-text searchable historical databases, has announced that usage statistics for its collecti...