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D-Lib Jan/Feb 2011 Aalbersberg & Kahler |
Supporting Science through the Interoperability of Data and Articles Whereas it is established practice to publish relevant findings of a research project in a scientific article, there are no standards yet as to whether and how to make the underlying research data publicly accessible.  |
Information Today August 4, 2011 |
Elsevier Introduces Genome Viewer The Genome Viewer is a SciVerse application that displays detailed gene or genomic sequence information on the genes mentioned in an article.  |
Information Today June 6, 2011 |
Elsevier Enriches Online Articles with Google Maps Elsevier announced that Google Maps functionality is now available in its journals.  |
Information Today April 30, 2007 |
Elsevier Enhances ScienceDirect Elsevier, the STM publisher, announced that it has added several new features to ScienceDirect in its latest release.  |
Information Today October 3, 2013 |
Elsevier Introduces Reference Modules on ScienceDirect These collections arrange Elsevier's scientific reference articles by subject for searching in individual databases. Now researchers can access Elsevier content as it is uploaded to ScienceDirect.  |
Information Today June 20, 2011 |
Elsevier and Molecular Connections Develop Two New Applications on SciVerse Applications Elsevier announced two new applications from Molecular Connections, a life science informatics company, on SciVerse Applications beta.  |
Information Today June 7, 2010 |
Adobe Unveils Digital Viewer Technology for Magazines This new publishing software was developed with input from Conde Nast's WIRED magazine, a publication that recently debuted a digital edition for Apple iPad, utilizing the new digital viewer technology.  |
Information Today July 28, 2011 |
New SciVerse App: iSpeech Audio Reader The iSpeech Audio Reader is the latest in a growing list of applications enhancing the use of SciVerse ScienceDirect content to improve researchers' workflows.  |
Information Today August 5, 2010 |
Elsevier Enriches Articles With Research Data Sets Elsevier articles at ScienceDirect are now enriched with graphical information linking to associated research data sets that are deposited at PANGAEA.  |
Information Today June 7, 2004 Robin Peek |
Elsevier Allows Open Access Self-Archiving In a move that has stunned both the publishing community and the academic world, major journal publisher Elsevier is going to permit Open Access self-archiving for almost all of its journal titles.  |
Information Today June 27, 2011 |
Elsevier and Ex Libris Group Announce Collaboration Elsevier and Ex Libris Group announced their collaboration to make the full text of SciVerse ScienceDirect journal articles and ebooks searchable in the Ex Libris Primo Central Index.  |
Information Today February 23, 2012 |
New F1000 App Helps Researchers Explore Content in Elsevier's SciVerse Faculty of 1000, an online service that selects and evaluates articles based on the opinions of global leaders in biology and medicine, announced the launch of a new application that helps researchers explore the scientific content in Elsevier's SciVerse platform.  |
T.H.E. Journal October 2005 Moss & Solomon |
Teaching the Fourth `R' of Science Education: Research A partnership program between the Bronx High School of Science and Elsevier introduces students to the world of scientific research through ScienceDirect.  |
Information Today July 23, 2009 |
Elsevier Introduces Article of the Future Project The project takes full advantage of online capabilities, allowing readers individualized entry points and routes through content while exploiting the latest advances in visualization techniques.  |
Information Today January 22, 2001 Paula J. Hane |
Elsevier Science Expands and Repackages Its Online Offerings Elsevier Science and its ScienceDirect division have made a series of announcements recently about their products and services that are designed to provide customers with increased functionality and greater flexibility in their choices of content and pricing options...  |
Information Today April 17, 2008 Barbara Quint |
Elsevier Upgrades ScienceDirect Elsevier has announced that it will be launching some improvements to its ScienceDirect service, which provides access to the publisher's STM full-text journals and ebooks.  |
Technology Research News March 24, 2004 |
DNA has nano building in hand Researchers from Ludwig Maximilians University in Germany have built a simple molecular machine from DNA that can bind to and release single molecules of a specific type of protein.  |
Information Today December 11, 2000 Paula J. Hane |
Elsevier Science Previews New Web-Based Science Search Engine Elsevier Science has announced that it's developing a Web search engine for scientific information that will search both free and proprietary (access-controlled) content...  |
Chemistry World June 14, 2011 |
A New Spin on Protein NMR A new technique will allow researchers to study protein structure in greater detail using NMR.  |
Reactive Reports Issue 51 David Bradley |
Protein Crystals Trapped Researchers have developed a new technique for crystallizing proteins, which could open up a whole range of materials to this powerful analytical technique.  |
Bio-IT World June 12, 2002 Mark D. Uehling |
Putting Proteins in Their Place Will a 'periodic table' of proteins help classify the ungainly beasts?  |
Information Today September 9, 2010 Sue Polanka |
Elsevier's SciVerse Hub--Transforming Scientific Research SciVerse development began back in 2008, after Elsevier interviewed more than 3,000 researchers, librarians, and application developers to determine obstacles in scientific research.  |
Chemistry World October 27, 2006 Richard Van Noorden |
Synthetic Origami Folds Like Natural Enzymes Researchers have synthesised a large organic molecule that folds up like a small protein, though its backbone is entirely non-biological. The achievement is a step along the path to producing truly synthetic enzymes in the laboratory.  |
Chemistry World December 12, 2011 Simon Hadlington |
Zwitterion approach to stabilizing drug proteins Researchers in the US have discovered a new way to stabilize and protect protein molecules without affecting the protein's biological activity.  |
Information Today September 20, 2012 |
Elsevier Launches Ebook Legacy Collection on ScienceDirect With the addition of the Legacy Collection to ScienceDirect, highly relevant, scientific books from the mid-20 th century to the present will be accessible online as early as December 2012.  |
Information Today November 18, 2010 Sue Polanka |
New Image Search from Elsevier's SciVerse ScienceDirect With the launch of its new Image Search functionality, Elsevier provides STM researchers a visual entry way into millions of journal articles and ebooks.  |
Searcher December 2000 Jill E. Grogg & Carol Tenopir |
Linking to Full Text in Scholarly Journals There is an exciting variety of options, but a variety that can confuse both information professionals and end users. When trying to find the full text of journal articles, the promises and advertisements of aggregators and publishers often seem inflated...  |
Chemistry World February 13, 2014 Philip Ball |
Ice core to antifreeze protein's inner workings The antifreeze protein that protects the winter flounder from sub-zero temperatures has been found to have an odd structure.  |
Chemistry World April 27, 2006 |
`Sticky Trees' Glue Molecules to Proteins Researchers have developed a chemical glue that binds molecules to proteins without compromising protein function. The method could be used to modify a wide range of proteins for a variety of purposes, such as in the development of new protein-based therapies.  |
Information Today February 2, 2012 |
WorldCat Local Users to Search SciVerse ScienceDirect Journals and Ebooks With this collaboration, Elsevier is strengthening its commitment to the library community, simplifying research for library patrons and enhancing usage of its scientific publications.  |
D-Lib Jan/Feb 2012 Tomasz Neugebauer |
A Report from the 2011 ICSTI Workshop on Multimedia and Visualization Innovations for Science Innovations in science oriented web multimedia, large-scale data exploration and visualization, speech recognition, and video and image indexing and analysis, offer opportunities for accelerating scientific discovery.  |
Chemistry World June 25, 2013 Michael Gross |
A foaming protein from the horse's mouth Researchers in the UK have solved the structure of this protein, yielding tantalizing hints to a novel kind of surface activity and to evolutionary connections to other examples.  |
Bio-IT World April 15, 2003 Robert M. Frederickson |
Protein Chemistry Surfaces Protein chips seek to do for protein expression profiling what DNA chips did for RNA expression.  |
Information Today June 9, 2008 Nancy Herther |
Elsevier Releases Scopus Journal Analyzer Subscribers to Elsevier's Scopus have a new tool to aid in evaluating journal performance over time.  |
Information Today May 5, 2015 |
Elsevier Supports Researchers With Online Training Campus; Updates Article-Sharing Policies Elsevier launched Elsevier Publishing Campus, a free online platform that offers training resources to academic researchers.  |
Chemistry World April 26, 2009 Simon Hadlington |
Glowing protein in 'animal photosynthesis' Scientists have discovered that a glowing protein found in some exotic marine animals and used widely as a 'marker' in molecular biology has another remarkable property  |
Information Today September 2, 2003 |
NewsBreaks Elsevier and ACS Agree to Link... ebrary Launches Library Center... ALA and Others Request Public Input on Homeland Security Procedures...  |
InternetNews May 1, 2006 Andy Patrizio |
Microsoft Helps N.Y. Times Update its Online Look Bill Gates demonstrated a prototype viewer called Times Reader, developed in conjunction with the New York Times and built on the Windows Presentation Foundation library.  |
Information Today April 11, 2011 |
Elsevier Launches 'Apps for Science' Challenge This is an international competition challenging software developers to create customized applications for the SciVerse platform that enhance information search and discovery for researchers.  |
HHMI Bulletin Winter 2013 Nicole Kresge |
A Structural Revolution Over the years, scientists and artists have used an assortment of techniques to showcase molecular structure.  |
Bio-IT World June 12, 2002 Karen Hopkin |
Computational Biologists Join the Fold CASP5 competitors compare the best algorithms for modeling the 3-D structure of proteins -- an exercise that could lead to new insights into the pathogenesis and treatment of disease.  |
Information Today July 14, 2015 |
Elsevier Promotes Data Sharing With Reciprocal Linking Elsevier partnered with the National Cancer Institute to implement two-way linking between ScienceDirect's articles and publicly accessible datasets from NCI's cancer Nanotechnology Laboratory  |
Chemistry World January 19, 2011 Jon Cartwright |
Modified protein binders give shortcut to drugs The method, which involves attaching polypeptides to the binders, could help reduce the work required to develop protein binders into safer drugs.  |
Information Today July 2, 2001 Robin Peek |
Current Science Group, Elsevier Science Offer New Science Services In an effort to demonstrate that publishers can be just as nimble and creative as new efforts like PubMed, two of them have just announced new services for scientists...  |
Information Today April 2002 Richard Poynder |
Not Pleading Poverty Elsevier Science chairman Derk Haank addresses industry and end-user issues...  |
Information Today May 13, 2010 |
Elsevier Develops Scopus Alerts (Lite) iPhone App Elsevier announced it has built a new iPhone application, Scopus Alerts, which gives researchers mobile access to the Searching and Alerting features of Scopus, the abstract and citation database.  |
Information Today January 19, 2009 Paula J. Hane |
Elsevier Launches SciTopics--Now a Fully Developed Research 2.0 Resource The newly expanded SciTopics offers additional functionality and features and a new look and feel for the information and collaboration web resource designed for the scientific community.  |
Information Today March 15, 2004 Paula J. Hane |
Elsevier Announces Scopus Service After two years of planning, development, and initial testing by a select group of about 20 university libraries, Elsevier has finally made an official announcement of the first fully functioning version of Scopus, its highly anticipated, full-text linking, abstracting and indexing database.  |
Chemistry World December 21, 2006 Henry Nicholls |
Silent SNPs Serve up a Structural Surprise The sequence of amino acids no longer dictates the structure and function of a protein according to a surprising new paper.  |
HHMI Bulletin February 2011 Michele Solis |
Right Before Your Eyes Coupling protein sequence to function, thousands of variants at a time.  |