Discover Research Literature Using Visuals: Litmaps
This week we will show you a tool to find research papers through literature connection networks. It can also help you get insights into literature in your topics.
This week we will show you a tool to find research papers through literature connection networks. It can also help you get insights into literature in your topics.
Named after the ancient Library of Alexandria in Egypt, OpenAlex is an index of hundreds of millions of interconnected entities across the global research system.
With the COVID pandemic continuing into the third year, in this week’s Research Bridge, let’s take a look at SciSight, a system for exploratory search for current COVID-19 literature corpus.
The Open Science Framework (OSF) is a free, open-source tool hosted by the Center for Open Science. This post shares how OSF can be used to facilitate your research project lifecycle.
BrowZine allows you to browse much of the Library's subscribed journal content via an easy-to-use and intuitive interface.
Research data is sometimes hard to understand. With so much data being processed in a research, data visualization can provide a better way to understand the data.
ResearchRabbit is a new tool for literature exploration and mapping. As hinted by its name, this tool aims to give you a leg up down the research rabbit hole.
The Library is now trialing scite.ai, a smart citation index that displays the context of citations and classifies their intent using AI. Read the blog to learn how it works and its key features.
Last week, Web of Science rolled out a new interface. As it is one of the most heavily used e-resources, here we highlight some of the noteworthy new features.
IEEE DataPort is an online data repository developed by IEEE. This post is a preliminary review of this relatively new offering. Potential issues on access and deposit of datasets are highlighted.