Στις 5/6/21 10:12 μ.μ., ο/η Adrian Klaver έγραψε:
On 6/5/21 10:39 AM, Achilleas Mantzios wrote:
Στις 5/6/21 8:03 μ.μ., ο/η Adrian Klaver έγραψε:
On 6/5/21 9:56 AM, Achilleas Mantzios wrote:
Στις 5/6/21 6:34 μ.μ., ο/η Adrian Klaver έγραψε:
On 6/5/21 2:49 AM, Achilleas Mantzios wrote:
Hello
I am imagining a system that can parse papers from various
sources (web/files/etc) and in various formats (text, pdf, etc)
and can store metadata for this paper ,some kind of global ID if
applicable, authors, areas of research, whether the paper is
"new", "highlighted", "historical", type (e.g. Case reports,
Clinical trials), symptoms (e.g. tics, GI pain, psychological
changes, anxiety, ), and other key attributes (I guess dynamic),
it must be full text searchable, etc.
I am at the very beginning in this and it is done on a fully
volunteer basis.
Lots of questions : is there any scientific/scholar analysis
software already available? If yes and is really good and open
source , then this will influence the rest of decisions.
Otherwise , I'll have to form a team that can write one, in this
case I'll have to decide DB, language, etc. I work 20 years with
pgsql so it is the natural choice for any kind of data, I just
ask this for the sake of completeness.
All ideas welcome.
A quick search found this:
https://solutionsreview.com/data-management/the-best-open-source-data-catalog-tools-to-consider/
Might be a good starting point on what is already out there.
This is interesting, so the keywords are "Data Catalog" ?
What I searched on was 'open source article catalog'.
There is also this:
The Directory of Open Access Journals
https://doaj.org/
This seems very very poor. Just try a search there and then repeat
in PMC (PubMed Central).
This is down to copyright issues I'm sure. For PubMed Central see:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/about/copyright/
for the if/ands/buts that restrict what you can do with the
information and stay legal.
maybe but still :
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/?term=open+access%5Bfilter%5D+PANDAS+IVIG
Yeah it is nice to have the resources of the NIH behind you. Still I
would point out under Copyright and License information:
"This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for
unrestricted research re-use and secondary analysis in any form or by
any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These
permissions are granted for the duration of the World Health
Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic."
Further on PMC Open Access Subset:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/tools/openftlist/
Again more ifs/ands/buts.
The point being, dealing with articles is a descent into legalese. I
am not saying this is show stopper, just that it will consume
considerable resources to sort out. I for one applaud your effort and
given what I have seen you do with the shipping software over the
years I don't see this project as out of the realm of possibility.
Thank you Adrian, there is no money in this project, but the stakes are
much much higher.
>
https://doaj.org/search/articles?ref=homepage-box&source=%7B%22query%22%3A%7B%22query_string%22%3A%7B%22query%22%3A%22IVIG%20PANDAS%22%2C%22default_operator%22%3A%22AND%22%7D%7D%7D
It seems to be a service, not downloadable software.