Difference between revisions of "Bibliographic/OOoBib Functional Requirements/Keywords"
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* contact librarians, other groups | * contact librarians, other groups | ||
* contact others who might be interested or have done work in this field (e.g. Pubmed; I have contacted the Pubmed team and hope for an answer) | * contact others who might be interested or have done work in this field (e.g. Pubmed; I have contacted the Pubmed team and hope for an answer) | ||
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+ | Some journals already sort their articles based on some specific features (e.g. Circulation - the journal of the American Heart Association; Chest, and others). Therefore, it could be somewhat more easy to implement some of the standardisation, because professional societies do use them. However, other fields are covered less well and could cause some pain. | ||
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+ | Probably it is the best thing to ask the professional societies to create such a framework. | ||
==== How to implement this ==== | ==== How to implement this ==== |
Revision as of 09:30, 8 August 2006
This document has been placed on the wiki so that members of the OpenOffice community can assist in developing the design and documentation for the enhanced bibliographic facility.
Back to OOoBib Functional Requirements
Keywords
One way to better sort articles is based on Keywords (see my post on keywords).
However, there is another way I will shortly describe here.
There are a number of categories a research paper can belong to:
- Basic Research
- Theoretical Research (especially in Math/Physics)
- Modeling
- Trials:
- randomized controlled trial
- Meta-analysis
- other trial
- Review
- Guideline
- Correspondence
- Editorial
- Epidemiologic Study
- Case Report
- Images in clinical medicine (some Journals have such a feature/ could be a subgroup of Case Report)
- Questions/ Question-Answers
If there are other relevant categories, feel free to implement them as well.
This is especially useful when searching for all trials on a given matter (e.g. for writing a meta-analysis or writing a review or a guideline), or for a specific case report.
I do have some >2500 of articles saved on my computer and searching for the correct file is a nightmare. It may seem that 2500 articles is a huge number, however in infections diseases this is only a minimum to start with.
It is useful to have a field storing this information. Although custom fields exist, this is a feature that should be standard. It allows searching (and grouping) articles on a more powerful basis.
Submitted as issue number 66353 by discoleo at Openoffice.org.
Implementation ideas
How should this be implemented ? Most bib and document systems I have seem to think that adding a field for keywords is enough and let the user the invent their own categories. I have been involved in IT development and document management systems and have had enough lectures from librarians (ie professional indexers) to know that this just leads to a big unmanageable mess, which librarians are often called in to try to fix.
Also a good keyword system has a good set of aliases defined. One insurance company was providing different compensation for fractured limbs than for broken limbs, because their compensation history search system did not have these aliases defined. The cases and the compensation history diverged as each of the staff used their preferred term.
So --- Should we build pre-defined document category sets that a user could select one for each document collection. i.e. Medical Research, Physical Sciences, Social Sciences etc ? David Wilson
Discussion
After a thorough thought, I believe more and more, that a standardization is both highly useful and needed.
I wish to discuss 2 points:
* how to standardize * how to implement the standardization
How to standardize
This is a huge task and, because there is no standardization to date, I belive there is a reason. Therefore, before starting from scratch, it would be wise to search for work already done:
- search for standards
- contact librarians, other groups
- contact others who might be interested or have done work in this field (e.g. Pubmed; I have contacted the Pubmed team and hope for an answer)
Some journals already sort their articles based on some specific features (e.g. Circulation - the journal of the American Heart Association; Chest, and others). Therefore, it could be somewhat more easy to implement some of the standardisation, because professional societies do use them. However, other fields are covered less well and could cause some pain.
Probably it is the best thing to ask the professional societies to create such a framework.
How to implement this
In order to be used in practice, the end-user needs to be served everything already done. Therefore, the program MUST already suggest some appropriate categories. This could be more easily accomplished for major article category, but for more detailed keywords it will become increasingly difficult. (YES, I believe that even the keywords should be standardized, ... maybe sometime in the future.)
Specific procedure:
- scan journal title: jounals publish in most instances only articles from very specific fields (except maybe Nature and Science)
- scan title and abstract for some standard words
- depending on the words found, propose to the user an article category/ subcategory: e.g. medicine/ surgery/ randomized controlled trial
I will continue in the next section with a more thorough discussion of this implementation.
Requirements
Keywords
- alias: this is a synonyms for a specific word, i.e., the 2 words are equivalent
- 'hierarchical node': the presence of one term implies automatically another term, although the 2 are not aliases/synonyms, e.g. endocarditis implies infection, bacteremia, heart valves and medicine, too. Another non-medical example: whale implies both mammal and ocean (or water), but mammal does not imply whale.
Article Categories
The article category should contain both the field of work (e.g. medicine) and the type of article (e.g. review). Therefore we should have:
- category: see Journal Classification below
- article type: see at the top of this page
Journal Classification
This describes what is needed to implement a standardized journal classification.
We need to define/create lists with:
- basic categories: this needs to be defined at the top of the hierarchy; every article belongs to one (or more) of these basic categories
- list of journals: needed for the next point;
- basic category for journals: we will need to apply one or more categories to every journal.
Basic Field / Top Categories
Question: Do we need subcategories OR, more specifically, how do we define subcategories?
Some journals sort the articles based on some standardised subcategories (usually would be the 3-4 hierarchical node):
- Chest (respiratory and critical care medicine): see http://www.chestjournal.org/current.shtml (other issues may contain additional entries)
- Circulation (cardiology): see e.g. the contents on http://circ.ahajournals.org/content/vol114/issue6/ (see other issues as well)
- many more journals may sort their articles based on such highliting criteria, so some work has been already done by proffesional societies
These lists are incomplete. Please fill in whenever you find additional information.
Top Categories
Various book sites have such speciality lists, e.g. http://www.us.elsevierhealth.com/Medicine
- mathematics
- physics
- quantum mechanics (these would be subcategories, ... or still main categories)
- astrophysics
- others
- biology: part of biomedical sciences?
- biomedical sciences
- non-surgical/internal medicine
- cardiology
- endocrinology
- diabetology
- gastroenterology
- hepatology
- haematology/ hematology
- infectious diseases: should be separate entity?
- pulmology/ respiratory medicine
- nephrology
- neurology
- geriatric medicine: one node higher?
- immunology/ rheumatology: should be separate?
- many subspecialities
- dermatology
- intensive care / critical care
- cognitive sciences/ psichiatry
- paediatrics/ pediatrics
- radiology
- surgery
- abdominal surgery
- cardio-vascular surgery/ cardiothoracic surgery
- emergency medicine
- obstetrics and gynecology
- neurosurgery
- ophthalmology
- orthopedics
- otolaryngolgy/ ent surgery
- plastic surgery
- urology
- many subspecialities
- dentistry
- nursing
- non-surgical/internal medicine
Should these be higher categories
- infectious diseases
- microbiology (could be one hierarchical node higher)
- virology
- parasitology
- tropical medicine
- epidemiology
- microbiology (could be subspeciality of infectious diseases)
- infectious diseases
Feel free to expand this list!!!