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Archiver > APG > 2004-12 > 1102113429


From: "Lisa Arnold" <>
Subject: RE: [APG] new Google Scholar search engine
Date: Fri, 3 Dec 2004 17:37:09 -0500
In-Reply-To: <5.2.1.1.0.20041203131636.0116a230@pop.swbell.yahoo.com>


Wow. Thanks Mary for bringing this to our attention!

I just tried the new search engine by entering the word "Quakers". I chose
one of over 1800 hits, selected library sites, and the search engine had me
enter my zip code to see where I could find the book in circulation in
various libraries near me. By clicking on the links I was taken directly to
the various library websites, public as well as university libraries.
The other link next to each response is a website link, which looks to be
essentially the same as the regular Google response list.

This looks like it will enhance research considerably!

Lisa Arnold
Quakersearch.com


-----Original Message-----
From: Mary Douglass [mailto:]
Sent: Friday, December 03, 2004 2:17 PM
To:
Subject: [APG] new Google Scholar search engine

To: <>
Subject: [KANSAS-STUDIES] New Scholarly Search Engine

GOOGLE LAUNCHES NEW SCHOLARLY SEARCH ENGINE
Google recently unveiled a new search engine that focuses on academic
materials. According to a company statement, "Google Scholar" focuses
on
and limits its results to "scholarly literature such as peer-reviewed
papers, theses, books, preprints, abstracts, and technical reports."
Google
officials say they have the cooperation of a broad range of academic
publishers, library groups, scholarly societies, and colleges though
the
officials would not name the specific participants. Google officials
also
claim researchers may find articles on obscure topics on their site
that
Jstor and other similar search engines may overlook.

Google Scholar searches the full text of most of the documents it
indexes,
but in some cases the results point to articles or texts that can be
seen
only for a fee or with a subscription. In most such cases, users can
view a
free abstract of the article and then can decide whether they want to
seek
it out or buy it. The new tool also points researchers to other
related
works that may be of interest.

Google officials declined to state how they determined exactly how
material
is classified as "scholarly" or how Google Scholar determines which
results
are more relevant than others. But a company statement does say that
it
"takes into account the full text of each article as well as the
article's
author, the publication in which the article appeared, and how often it
has
been cited in scholarly literature."

To access Google Scholar, tap into: http://www.scholar.google.com .

SOURCE: NCH Washington Update, 3 December 2004
_______________________________________________
KANSAS-STUDIES mailing list

http://lists.washburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/kansas-studies

Mary Clement Douglass, CGRS
www.historical-matters.com
CGRS and Certified Genealogical Records Specialist are service marks of the
Board for
Certification of Genealogists, used under license by those who have passed
BCG's rigorous examination process.


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