4. What is SciVerse? SciVerse empowers the research community to accelerate science by opening ScienceDirect & Scopus content APIs for third-party application development, enabling intelligent search and discovery across integrated content from ScienceDirect, Scopus, and the scientific web
8. Image Search for full-text articles and books (e.g. photos, tables, videos)
9. Integration of REFLECT, the 2009 Grand Challenge winner, offers contextual information on proteins, genes and small molecules within articles.
10. Reference Work Helper links to relevant reference works on ScienceDirect directly connected to a selected article
11. Author Evaluation tool visualizes author data to aid collaboration or individual assessment decisions
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14. Prolific author search application finds the most “prolific authors” publishing articles about search terms, linking into articles by that author within Scopus.
15. The Table Download application scans a ScienceDirect article for HTML data tables in the full text. The tables can be downloaded to a CSV file suitable for importing into Excel or similar software.SciVerse Applications 7
27. ScienceDirect ScienceDirect is Elsevier’s extensive and unique full text database that covers authoritative titles from the core scientific literature. More than nine million full-text articles from 2,500 journals and 11,000 books are available in ScienceDirect, making up 25% of the world’s STM literature.
34. Collaboration is Key ScienceDirect collaborates with 3rd party providers to further accelerate research Partnership with NextBiohas enhanced ScienceDirect content in the fields of life sciences, health sciences and chemistry
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37. While viewing an article or book chapter on ScienceDirect, the keywords from that selected article or book chapter are matched against NextBio’s biomedical ontologies. Directly on the article page, researchers will find the NextBio application which presents key terms found in the selected article or book chapter.
38. The in-context pop-up allows the researcher to quickly gain an overview of the article from the perspective of their chosen term, and to quickly link through to other information.
39. Clicking within the NextBio application box allow for further exploration of the subject based on the trustworthy and publicly available sources collected and compiled by NextBio.
43. What is Scopus? The largest abstractandcitation database of research literature and quality web sources. It provides users with comprehensive coverage of leading peer reviewed literature. 40 million records 20 million cited records, 1996-present 20 million back files, 1823-1995
44. What does Scopus Cover? 16,500 peer reviewed journals 600 trade publications 350 book series Extensive conference coverage
45. Multi-disciplinary Subject Coverage Over 5,000 Publishers 7,200 6,800 4,300 5,300 Life Sciences Physical Sciences Health Sciences Social Sciences
46. New! Arts and Humanities in Scopus Increased coverage in the Arts and Humanities New A&H Content ~1450 titles Current A&H Content ~1600 titles Scopus is now truly an “all-science database” for large universities with strong A&H faculties
47. International Journal Coverage North America 37% Asia, Australia, and Pacific 12% Europe, Middle East & Africa 50% South America 1%
58. One citation = high valueMore on SJR SJR is a prestige metric – citations weighted depending on where they come from - A journal transfers its prestige by citing - Prestige transferred = journal’s SJR e.g. Lancet SJR 2007 = 1.541 – high prestige e.g. Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports SJR 2007 = 0.153 – lower prestige A journal’s prestige is shared equally between its citations Normalize for differences in citation behaviour between subject fields
63. Scopus API Through the Scopus API, any website can incorporate Scopus' powerful search capabilities, high quality citation data and up-to-date citation counts. Why is this Important? Sourcing and providing accurate publication data efficiently. The very best repositories often miss 40% of their institute’s output. Examples…
75. For additional help or information: Check the ‘Help’ section on every page of ScienceDirect, Scopus and the Admin Tool Helpful websites: -SciVerse, ScienceDirect and Scopus Info Site: info.sciverse.com -Admin Tool Info Site: info.admintool.elsevier.com -More on SJR & SNIP: journalindicators.com & scimagojr.com -For free live or prerecorded trainings: trainingdesk.elsevier.com For further information please contact the E-Helpdesk at usinfo@elsevier.com or 1-888-615-4500
76. Thank You! Rachel McCullough Account Development Manager r.mccullough@elsevier.com
Hinweis der Redaktion
Point out Methods Search application
Full Text (ScienceDirect), Abstract (Scopus) and External (Web Content from Scirus) IconsNote, if you do not subscribe to Scopus, the Scopus results will not show up in your results.
Refine results section has recently been enhanced with the ability to limit by “Content Source.”
Here you will see your applications that are relevant to this SciVerse Hub search. You are able to hide these applications at any time.
The Application Gallery
The overview page of a particular application
ScienceDirect offers a dedicated image search with e.g., links to its location within the source article to easily understand the context. Users save time by not having to scan complete articles to find relevant images (e.g. figures, photos, tables, and videos)
For Life Science users SciVerse ScienceDirect offers articles enriched with contextual information on proteins, genes and small molecules as assembled by European Molecular Biology Laboratory’s service Reflect. Reflect recognizes proteins, genes and small molecules from web pages, and link them to information-rich summaries. These can now be found directly from within the SciVerse ScienceDirect article.
Related articles from Reference Works are offered on the right hand side of an article in order to connect essential and fundamental information from reference works on SciVerse ScienceDirect. In that way users can easily access related basic knowledge for broadening their perspective or better understanding a new and unfamiliar topic.
Something that Elsevier is very proud of is Scopus’ international journal coverage. It is very important to capture the surge in publication growth coming from developing countries. China has had a 505% growth in research output over the past 10 years
It is now possible to export the citations from 20,000 Scopus records at one time, an increase from 5,000 records. This allows institutes to perform easier low-end institutional analysis where it’s possible to download the full scientific output of an institute for one year through one fast download.
Many institutions also find it difficult to comprehensively identify all published research produced by their researchers (especially those that are no longer with the institute).
Here is an example of how a customer at Hong Kong University uses Scopus API to highlight his achievements.And this is an example of how Baystate Medical Center shows off recent faculty publications.We encourage you to register your institute through the Scopus info cite.
The new Scopus Alerts (Lite) application, which went live on Wednesday May 12, gives researchers mobile access to the Searching and Alerting features of Scopus. It’s designed to eliminate the need for scientists to seek out a desktop or laptop computer to search for quality research data while travelling, attending conferences or commuting to work. This mobile app includes some of Scopus’s most popular features. It allows researchers to: • Search across thousands of scholarly journals. • Share search results and article links through e-mail or Twitter. • Save important abstracts in one place for easy look-up.• Set up and review e-mail alerts for their favorite searches.• Set up e-mail alerts for when an author cites a particular article.• Annotate abstracts with their own notes.
• You will enter the main page for your consortium, your account or your group within your account, depending on your administrator rights.• Use the right hand bar to navigate to accounts within your consortium and to groups within your account.• If you have subscribed to both ScienceDirect and Scopus, both tabs will appear. If you have only subscribed to ScienceDirect or Scopus, only the relevant tab will appear.
• Click on ‘Create/Edit a Group’ to modify the groups within your account.• Create groups in order to organize IP address ranges and users within your account, to specify Scopus and/or ScienceDirect product settings for different user groups, and to track specific group usage.Organizing your account into groups enables you to control the document delivery settings, transactional access and credit card purchasing rights for the specified groups, as well as track the usage for those groups.If you wish to delete groups, please contact E-Helpdesk.
Edit Account IP RangesManage your users’ access rights, based on IP ranges• Click on ‘Account IP Ranges’ on the homepage.• View the ranges of IP addresses currently assigned to your account.• Use the checkboxes and the navigation bar to make the following changes to the ranges of IP addresses:- Move- Remove- Split into subsets that can be individually deleted or moved todifferent groups• Request new IP ranges to be added to your account. You will receive an email confirming your request. E-Customer Service will follow-up with you as soon as the changes have been made.
If you click on ‘Usage Reports’, you can log on to the Usage Reporting Site via a link in the Admin Tool using your Administrator username and password.• If you click on ‘Library Integration’, you can configure transactional access for downloading non-subscribed articles, document delivery for your account and your groups, establish credit card purchasing rights, and view your transactional balances.
Set up your own library branding• Click on the tab for the product that you want to customize (either ScienceDirect or Scopus, depending on your subscriptions).• Click on ‘Institutional Logo or Text’.• You can set up the display of your library logo and descriptive text to appear on ScienceDirect and/or Scopus.• You can also include a link from ScienceDirect and/or Scopus to your library website.
Contact details are available on the back cover of theQuick Reference Guide