Category Archives: Libraries Databases

Libraries Database News: “IET announces the release of arXiv content in Inspec”

Libraries Database News:

Researchers using arXiv for discovery will soon be able to search arXiv content as part of the Inspec database, and enjoy the sophisticated search functionality offered by the Engineering Village platform. Description of the Inspec database provided at the end of this posting.

Full press release for Inspec – arXiv integration at http://www.theiet.org/policy/media/press-releases/inspec-arxiv.cfm

13 September 2016

The Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET) has announced that over 30,000 pre-print articles available in the online repository arXiv will be indexed in Inspec, the leading abstract and indexing database for physics and engineering. The addition of these articles, which will take place by the end of this year, will substantially increase the content held in Inspec, which currently holds over 16 million records, and deliver even greater access to cutting-edge research.

Inspec is the first engineering and physics database to index arXiv records, which include open-access e-prints in a variety of disciplines such as Applied Optics, Physics, Astronomy, Circuits and Computer Science. By including arXiv content in Inspec, researchers will now benefit from Inspec’s highly-curated, world-leading thesaurus, allowing users to query the records in a way they have not been able to before.

Information about Inspec: [From Inspec Fact Sheet ]

Containing almost 16 million records across multidisciplinary and subject specific research including physics, engineering, communications and computing, Inspec is one of the most definitive abstract and indexing databases available. Inspec indexes abstracts to a wide range of formats including journal articles, book chapters, conference proceedings, reports, patents, dissertations and even video allowing researchers to discover whatever content suits their needs. The platform is also home to a sizeable collection of unique content from all across the world, not found on any other database, representing a great wealth of potentially untapped information.

Inspec includes bibliographic citations and indexed abstracts from publications in the fields of physics, electrical and electronic engineering, communications, computer science, control engineering, information technology, manufacturing and mechanical engineering, operations research, material science, oceanography, engineering mathematics, nuclear engineering, environmental science, geophysics, nanotechnology, biomedical technology and biophysics.

Web of Science – New Content Available

UVic’s suite of Web of Science products now includes:

Web of science Core Collection
Access scholarly literature in the sciences, social sciences, arts, and humanities.

Biosis Citation Index
Life sciences and biomedical research covering pre-clinical and experimental research, methods, instrumentation, and animal studies,

Current Contents Index
Complete tables of contents and bibliographic information from the world’s leading scholarly journals and books

Derwent Innovations Index
Value-added patent information from Derwent World Patent Index® as well as patent citation information from Patents Citation Index®.

Data Citation Index
Access an array of data across subjects and regions, providing a comprehensive picture of research output to understand data in context and maximize research efforts.

Medline
The U.S. National Library of Medicine® (NLM®) life sciences database.

SciELO
Get a more complete global picture by discovering new insights from research in Latin America, Spain, Portugal, the Caribbean and South Africa.

Zoological Record
The world’s leading taxonomic reference and oldest continuing database of animal biology.

Coming soon:
Chinese Science Citation Database
Provides bibliographic information and citations to articles in 1200 core science and engineering journals published in the People’s Republic of China.

Web of Science – Tutorial Videos for New Interface

The Web of Science database has a newly redesigned search interface. There are a number of brief video tutorials offered by the Web of Science developers that offer tips for effective use of the new interface.

If you have questions, or would like a demo of the new Web of Science, contact Kathleen Matthews, Subject Librarian, for Physics & Astronomy, Chemistry, Earth & Ocean Sciences, and , Biology & Forest Biology,

Web of Science Basic Search