Citebase

From HandWiki

Citebase Search was an experimental, semi-autonomous citation index for free, online research literature created at the University of Southampton as part of the Open Citation Project.[1][2][3] It harvested open access e-prints (most author self-archived) from OAI-PMH compliant archives, parses and links their references and indexes the metadata in a Xapian-based search engine.[4] Citebase went live in 2005[1] and ceased operation in 2013.[3][5] More than three-quarters of the papers indexed were author self-archived in the ArXiv archive, which includes physics, maths and computer science.[6] Some (published) biomedical papers were indexed from BioMed Central and PubMed Central.[6]

See also

  • EPrints
  • Citeseer
  • NASA ADS
  • Stanford Physics Information Retrieval System

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Brody, Timothy (2006). Evaluating Research Impact through Open Access to Scholarly Communication (phd thesis). University of Southampton.
  2. "Citebase". http://iplus.ukoln.ac.uk/technology/citebase. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 Shotton, David (2013-10-17). "Publishing: Open citations" (in en). Nature News 502 (7471): 295–297. doi:10.1038/502295a. PMID 24137832. 
  4. Harnad, Stevan (2008-11-14). "Open access scientometrics and the UK Research Assessment Exercise". Scientometrics 79 (1): 147–156. doi:10.1007/s11192-009-0409-z. ISSN 0138-9130. https://akademiai.com/doi/abs/10.1007/s11192-009-0409-z. 
  5. "Archive of 2013 citebase home page". http://www.citebase.org/. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 Steve Hitchcock; Arouna Woukeu (2003). "Citebase Evaluation Report: Full Official Version: OpCit". http://opcit.eprints.org/evaluation/Citebase-evaluation/evaluation-report.html. 

External links