Academic literature on the topic 'Scientific literature Abstracting and indexing'

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Journal articles on the topic "Scientific literature Abstracting and indexing"

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Gupta, Vishnu Kumar, and Praveen Babel. "Accuracy of References in Journal Literature of Medical Sciences: A Review." IRA-International Journal of Management & Social Sciences (ISSN 2455-2267) 12, no. 3 (October 10, 2018): 62. http://dx.doi.org/10.21013/jmss.v12.n3.p2.

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This review of literature presents the accuracy level of references in journal articles related to domain of medical science and its allied subjects. Peer-reviewed journals, which are being indexed in international citation databases and possess high impact factor, have reference errors. Not only journal articles but also the PubMed database contains bibliographic errors. Due to faulty references, task of indexing and abstracting of authors and articles in citation databases becomes troublesome. The high level of reference accuracy makes the scientific writings more reliable and useful which further moves towards the high quality scholarship.
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Bradford, S. C. "The extent to which scientific and technical literature is covered by present abstracting and indexing periodicals." Journal of the Society of Chemical Industry 56, no. 43 (August 30, 2010): 947–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jctb.5000564303.

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Daichi, Akira, Arata Gin, and Arta Eiji. "Interactive Module Design Using The Course Lab Application Based on a Scientific Approach to Materials Business, Energy and Momentum." IAIC Transactions on Sustainable Digital Innovation (ITSDI) 2, no. 1 (October 26, 2020): 75–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.34306/itsdi.v2i1.355.

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A well-prepared abstract enables the reader to identify the basic content of a document quickly and accurately, to determine its relevance to their interests, and thus to decide whether to read the document in its entirety. The Abstract should be informative and completely self-explanatory, provide a clear statement of the problem, the proposed approach or solution, and point out major findings and conclusions. The Abstract should be 100 to 150 words in length, the font style is Arial in Italic mode and the font size is 10. The abstract should be written in the past tense. Standard nomenclature should be used and abbreviations should be avoided. No literature should be cited. The keyword list provides the opportunity to add keywords, used by the indexing and abstracting services, in addition to those already present in the title. Judicious use of keywords may increase the ease with which interested parties can locate our article.
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Tsay, Ming-yueh. "A bibliometric study of indexing and abstracting, 1876-1976." Indexer: The International Journal of Indexing: Volume 16, Issue 4 16, no. 4 (October 1, 1989): 234–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/indexer.1989.16.4.3.

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In a bibliometric study of references to indexing and abstracting from 1876 to 1976 a total of 2,381 references in Wellisch’s Indexing and abstracting: an international bibliography were analysed by a PL/1 program. Most of the articles (67%) appeared as journal papers. The Bradford-Zipf law was applied to investigate the journal literature. Thirteen core journals were identified, six of which emphasize the subject of indexing and abstracting. Lotka’s law was used to measure the productivity of authors. The vast majority, 1,533 out of 1,966 authors, contributed only one article. The leading authors and their active life in this subject were also studied. English is the predominant language of articles on indexing and abstracting.
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Scarletto, Edith A. "Mapping the Literature of GIS." College & Research Libraries 75, no. 2 (March 1, 2014): 179–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/crl12-389.

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This study analyzed citations in four journals, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Cartography and Geographic Information Science, International Journal of Geographical Information Science, and Cartographic Journal, using Bradford’s Law of Scattering to identify three influence zones indicating core and peripheral titles in the study areas of GIS. Journals were ranked resulting in twenty-three core journals and 187 secondary journals. Scores for relevant indexing/abstracting services are also given to describe access points and coverage. The results can assist librarians and collection managers to support research in their institutions where GIS is both used and studied.
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Barbosa, Tiago Manuel. "The changes in the research landscape and the revamp of the Journal Motricidade." Motricidade 12, no. 1 (June 23, 2016): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.6063/motricidade.9547.

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<p>The Journal Motricidade (that stands for Motricity in Portuguese) for more than a decade has been publishing original papers and review articles that are methodologically sound, theoretically grounded in the scientific areas of sports sciences, human movement, human development and health. Both qualitative and quantitative researches are welcome. Over this period of time the journal had as mission providing Portuguese speaking researchers a place to share their findings. Journal Motricidade is a niche publication and as such depends strongly of its stakeholders. Therefore, we would like to acknowledge everyone that one way or the other supported this periodic.</p><p>However, the research and academia landscape changed over the last ten years. The community has been growing significantly. The amount of research projects funded and papers published has been increasing sharply. Living in a global and interconnected world these days, international collaborations are a must. Because of these opportunities and challenges, it is time to revamp the Journal. Therefore a comprehensive set of changes were put in place. To begin with, we are opening the journal to the international community, besides Portuguese speaking researchers and academics. Hence, submitted manuscripts must be draft in English and comply with the guidelines by the American Psychological Association (APA) for the presentation of scientific articles in peer-reviewed journals.</p><p>Journal Motricidade will keep providing immediate open access to its content. To allow a quick and effective dissemination of the authors’ findings, it is currently indexed in several influential databases. Among these are some of the largest abstract and citation database of peer-reviewed literature such as the ISI Web of Science and Scielo Citation Index by Thomson Reuters, Scopus and EMCare by Elsevier or SCImago (SJR: Medicine, Health Professions). As far as indexing and abstracting goes, we will work towards being included in more databases in the near future.</p><p>Submitted manuscripts go through an internal and an external reviewing process. Upon submission by the authors, it is carried out an internal review by the editorial board. The main aim at this stages it to verify if the manuscript falls under the journal’s scope, the clarity of the writing, methodological adequacy, if it is in tandem with the best ethical practices and its adherence to the journal's guidelines. If the manuscript fulfils all these criteria, it is forward for blind peer-review.</p><p>Another update is that the Journal Motricidade no longer assesses the manuscripts on the subjective perception of importance or novelty of the findings reported. Rather, editors and reviewers are advised to check thoroughly the methodology and how it sounds based on the theoretical background or framework and the state of-the-art on such topic. We are looking forward for a comprehensive and rigorous report of the research design, experiments, data handling and statistical analysis.</p>Taking these actions to revamp the publication we hope to increase even more the journal’s standards of quality. It is also our wish to be part of the international debate on topics related to sports sciences, human movement, human development and health. If so, we will be helping to build a solid body of knowledge in such areas and; last but not least, to have a meaningful impact on the evidence-based practice by professionals.
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Fangerau, H. "Finding European bioethical literature: an evaluation of the leading abstracting and indexing services." Journal of Medical Ethics 30, no. 3 (June 1, 2004): 299–303. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jme.2003.003269.

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Karanfilska, Dijana Plaseska, and Emilija Sukarova Stefanovska. "“Balkan Journal of Medical Genetics” - Facts, Editorial Policies, Practices and Challenges." PRILOZI 35, no. 3 (December 1, 2014): 89–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/prilozi-2015-0013.

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AbstractThe Balkan Journal of Medical Genetics (BJMG) is an international, open access journal that publishes scientific papers covering different aspects of medical genetics. It is published by the Macedonian Academy of Sciences and Arts twice a year in both printed and electronic versions. BJMG is covered by many abstracting and indexing databases, including PubMed Central and Thomson Reuters.Although there are many journals in the field of medical genetics, only a few come from regions outside Western Europe and North America. Being one of these few journals, BJMG aims to promote genetics and research on this topic in the Balkan countries and beyond. BJMG's ultimate goal is to raise the scientific quality and metrics of the journal and provide a better place for BJMG in the community of scientific journals.
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Shah, Jay. "Appropriate citation and accuracy of references: read full text before citing." Journal of Patan Academy of Health Sciences 9, no. 1 (June 17, 2022): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/jpahs.v9i1.45539.

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Reference accuracy is important for good science. Cited references must be verifiable and accessible to the readers, reviewers, and editors. When the source cannot be found, it raises question of the quality of the manuscript, and also undermine the credibility of the journal (and editors). Almost all the domains of peer-reviewed medical journal literature report errors in referencing and citations which affect indexing, abstracting, and publication metrics. Citation is properly referring to information presented by others’ and provides authenticity to own work by directing readers to the sources.
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Omodanisi, Ope, A. J. Egwakhe, and O. E. Ajike. "Main Title: Make sure your research title describes (a) the topic, (b) the method, (c) the sample, and (d) the results of your study." JOURNAL OF SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH 15 (April 19, 2020): 127–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.24297/jssr.v15i.8709.

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The manuscript should contain an abstract. The abstract should be self-contained, citation-free, and should not exceed 200 words. An abstract is a summary of a research article, thesis, review, conference proceeding, or any in-depth analysis of a particular subject and is often used to help the reader quickly ascertain the paper's purpose. When used, an abstract always appears at the beginning of a manuscript or typescript, acting as the point-of-entry for any given academic paper or patent application. Abstracting and indexing services for various academic disciplines are aimed at compiling a body of literature for that particular subject.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Scientific literature Abstracting and indexing"

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Das, Neves Fernando Adrian. "Stepping Stones and Pathways:Improving Retrieval by Chains of Relationships between Documents." Diss., Virginia Tech, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/29419.

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The information retrieval (IR) field has been successful in developing techniques to address many types of information needs. However, there are cases in which traditional approaches to IR are not able to produce adequate results. Examples include: when a small set of (2-3) documents is needed as an answer rather than a single document, or when "query splitting" is required to satisfactorily explore the document space. We explore an alternative model of building and presenting retrieval results for such cases. In particular, we research effective methods for handling information needs that may: 1. Include multiple topics: A typical query is interpreted by current IR systems as a request to retrieve documents that each discusses all topics included in that query. We propose an alternative interpretation based on query splitting. It allows queries to be interpreted as requests to retrieve sets of documents rather than individual documents, with meaningful relationships among the members of each such set. 2. Be interpreted as parts in a chain of relationships: Suppose a query concerns topics t1 and tm. Is there a relation between topics t1 and tm that involves t2 and possibly other topics as in {t1, t2, â ¦ tm}? Thus, we propose an alternative interpretation of user queries and presentation of the results. Our interpretation has the potential to improve retrieval results whenever there is a mismatch between the user's understanding of the collection and the actual collection content. We define and refine a retrieval scheme that enhances retrieval through a framework that combines multiple sources of evidence. Query results in our interpretation are networks of document groups representing topics, each group relating to and connecting to other groups in the network that partially answer the user's information need. We devise new and more effective representations and techniques to visualize results, and incorporate the user as part of the retrieval process. We also evaluate the improvement of the query results based on multiple measures. In particular, we verify the validity of our approach through a study involving a collection of Operating Systems research papers that was specially built for this dissertation.
Ph. D.
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Books on the topic "Scientific literature Abstracting and indexing"

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Bakewell, K. G. B. Indexing children's books. Sheffield: Society of Indexers, 2000.

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Moys, Elizabeth M. Indexing legal materials. London: Society of Indexers, 1993.

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Teufel, Simone. The structure of scientific articles: Applications to citation indexing and summarization. Stanford, Calif: Center for the Study of Language and Information, 2010.

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Ḥalwajī, ʻAbd al-Sattār ʻAbd al-Ḥaqq, ed. Takshīf nuṣūṣ al-turāth al-ʻArabī wa-al-ajnabī. al-Qāhirah: Makabat al-Imām al-Bukharī lil-Nashr wa-al-Tawzīʻ, 2009.

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Harner, James L. On compiling an annotated bibliography. New York: Modern Language Associationof America, 1991.

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Harner, James L. On compiling an annotated bibliography. New York: Modern Language Association of America, 1985.

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On compiling an annotated bibliography. New York: Modern Language Association of America, 1991.

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On compiling an annotated bibliography. 2nd ed. New York: Modern Language Association of America, 2000.

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Teufel, Simone. The structure of scientific articles: Applications to citation indexing and summarization. Stanford, Calif: Center for the Study of Language and Information, 2010.

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International Repertory of Music Literature (Organization). RILM abstracts of music literature: English-language thesaurus : for volumes XXI- (1987- ). New York: RILM Abstracts, 1992.

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Book chapters on the topic "Scientific literature Abstracting and indexing"

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Fagbola, Olaronke O. "Indexing and Abstracting as Tools for Information Retrieval in Digital Libraries." In Advances in Library and Information Science, 156–78. IGI Global, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-0296-8.ch008.

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Indexing and abstracting are like Siamese twins in the information retrieval process. Indexing and abstracting are the two approaches to distilling information content into an abbreviated, but comprehensive representation of an information resource(s). They are knowledge organisation tools which usually provide detailed and accurate maps and road signs in the information superhighway. Digital libraries are characterised by an electronic stock of information which can be accessed via computers, and are extension and augmentations of physical libraries in digital forms. They are information retrieval systems (a device interposed between a potential user of information and the information itself) which provide opportunities to access and retrieve information that is often accessible for a variety of reasons. This chapter presents a literature review on indexing and abstracting, information retrieval process, digital libraries pointing out the importance of indexing and abstracting in the information retrieving process and then highlighting the roles played by indexing and abstracting as tools for information retrieval in digital libraries. The chapter posits that indexing and abstracting plays a significant role as information retrieval tools in digital libraries.
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Fagbola, Olaronke O. "Indexing and Abstracting as Tools for Information Retrieval in Digital Libraries." In Information Retrieval and Management, 905–27. IGI Global, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-5191-1.ch039.

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Indexing and abstracting are like Siamese twins in the information retrieval process. Indexing and abstracting are the two approaches to distilling information content into an abbreviated, but comprehensive representation of an information resource(s). They are knowledge organisation tools which usually provide detailed and accurate maps and road signs in the information superhighway. Digital libraries are characterised by an electronic stock of information which can be accessed via computers, and are extension and augmentations of physical libraries in digital forms. They are information retrieval systems (a device interposed between a potential user of information and the information itself) which provide opportunities to access and retrieve information that is often accessible for a variety of reasons. This chapter presents a literature review on indexing and abstracting, information retrieval process, digital libraries pointing out the importance of indexing and abstracting in the information retrieving process and then highlighting the roles played by indexing and abstracting as tools for information retrieval in digital libraries. The chapter posits that indexing and abstracting plays a significant role as information retrieval tools in digital libraries.
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Fagbola, Olaronke O. "Indexing and Abstracting as Tools for Information Retrieval in Digital Libraries." In Library Science and Administration, 573–95. IGI Global, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-3914-8.ch027.

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Indexing and abstracting are like Siamese twins in the information retrieval process. Indexing and abstracting are the two approaches to distilling information content into an abbreviated, but comprehensive representation of an information resource(s). They are knowledge organisation tools which usually provide detailed and accurate maps and road signs in the information superhighway. Digital libraries are characterised by an electronic stock of information which can be accessed via computers, and are extension and augmentations of physical libraries in digital forms. They are information retrieval systems (a device interposed between a potential user of information and the information itself) which provide opportunities to access and retrieve information that is often accessible for a variety of reasons. This chapter presents a literature review on indexing and abstracting, information retrieval process, digital libraries pointing out the importance of indexing and abstracting in the information retrieving process and then highlighting the roles played by indexing and abstracting as tools for information retrieval in digital libraries. The chapter posits that indexing and abstracting plays a significant role as information retrieval tools in digital libraries.
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Shoshani, Arie. "Multidimensionality in Statistical, OLAP and Scientific Databases." In Multidimensional Databases, 46–68. IGI Global, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-59140-053-0.ch002.

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The term “multidimensional databases” refers to data that can be viewed conceptually in a multidimensional space, where each dimension represents some attributes of the data. Viewing data in this form is natural for many applications, yet the concepts are not treated in a uniform way in the database literature. In this chapter, we show the commonality of concepts between three database areas: statistical, OLAP, and scientific databases. We show that these domains have two main structural concepts: the cross-product space of the dimensions, and the classification hierarchy structure associated with each dimension. In the first part of this chapter we describe how these structures are sed to represent data in statistical and OLAP databases and how summarization operators can be applied to them. Further, we discuss how these structures can be extended to represent related information using federated database concepts. In the second part of the chapter we show that these concepts are common to many scientific database applications. In particular, we discuss the importance of supporting classification structures and the difficulty in representing them as tables in relational databases. We also discuss data structures to support multidimensional databases, emphasizing space-time representation, clustering in multidimensional space, indexing in multidimensional space, and supporting classification structures. We conclude by arguing that the concepts of multidimensionality and classification structures as well as the operation over them should be elevated to “first class” object types. These object types should be visible by the application user explicitly in the conceptual schemas as well as exposing them in the user interfaces.
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Kulikowski, Casimir A. "50 Years of Achievements and Persistent Challenges for Biomedical and Health Informatics and John Mantas’ Educational and Nursing Informatics Contributions." In Studies in Health Technology and Informatics. IOS Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/shti220936.

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Biomedical and Health Informatics (BMHI) have been essential catalysts for achievements in medical research and healthcare applications over the past 50 years. These include increasingly sophisticated information systems and data bases for documentation and processing, standardization of biomedical data, nomenclatures, and vocabularies to assist with large scale literature indexing and text analysis for information retrieval, and methods for computationally modeling and analyzing research and clinical data. Statistical and AI techniques for decision support, instrumentation integration, and workflow aids with improved data/information management tools are critical for scientific discoveries in the - omics revolutions with their related drug and vaccine breakthroughs and their translation to clinical and preventive healthcare. Early work on biomedical image and pattern recognition, knowledge-based expert systems, innovative database, software and simulation techniques, natural language processing and computational ontologies have all been invaluable for basic research and education. However, these methods are still in their infancy and many fundamental open scientific problems abound. Scientifically this is due to persistent limitations in understanding biological processes within complex living environments and ecologies. In clinical practice the modeling of fluid practitioner roles and methods as they adjust to novel cybernetic technologies present great opportunities but also the potential of unintended e-iatrogenic harms which must be constrained in order to adhere to ethical Hippocratic norms of responsible behavior. Balancing the art, science, and technologies of BMHI has been a hallmark of debates about the field’s historical evolution. The present article reviews selected milestones, achievements, and challenges in BMHI education mainly, from a historical perspective, including some commentaries from leaders and pioneers in the field, a selection of which have been published online recently by the International Medical Informatics Association (IMIA) as the first volume of an IMIA History WG eBook. The focus of this chapter is primarily on the development of BMHI in terms of those of its educational activities which have been most significant during the first half century of IMIA, and it concentrates mainly on the leadership and contributions of John Mantas who is being honored on his retirement by the Symposia in Athens for which this chapter has been written.
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Conference papers on the topic "Scientific literature Abstracting and indexing"

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Lawrence, Steve, Kurt Bollacker, and C. Lee Giles. "Indexing and retrieval of scientific literature." In the eighth international conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/319950.319970.

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Stirbu, Simona, and Ninfa Greco. "SCIENTIFIC LITERATURE USES IN GEOGRAPHY: INDEXING AND “OVERLAP” IN FOUR BIBLIOGRAPHIC TOOLS." In GSA Annual Meeting in Indianapolis, Indiana, USA - 2018. Geological Society of America, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2018am-320335.

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Li, Hui, Xiaohong Jin, Yanjun Liu, and Yunliang Zhang. "Study on the Keywords Indexing System Based on Linked Triple Technology for Chinese Scientific and Technical Literature." In 2016 International Forum on Mechanical, Control and Automation (IFMCA 2016). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/ifmca-16.2017.15.

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Reports on the topic "Scientific literature Abstracting and indexing"

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Furey, John, Austin Davis, and Jennifer Seiter-Moser. Natural language indexing for pedoinformatics. Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), September 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/41960.

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The multiple schema for the classification of soils rely on differing criteria but the major soil science systems, including the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the international harmonized World Reference Base for Soil Resources soil classification systems, are primarily based on inferred pedogenesis. Largely these classifications are compiled from individual observations of soil characteristics within soil profiles, and the vast majority of this pedologic information is contained in nonquantitative text descriptions. We present initial text mining analyses of parsed text in the digitally available USDA soil taxonomy documentation and the Soil Survey Geographic database. Previous research has shown that latent information structure can be extracted from scientific literature using Natural Language Processing techniques, and we show that this latent information can be used to expedite query performance by using syntactic elements and part-of-speech tags as indices. Technical vocabulary often poses a text mining challenge due to the rarity of its diction in the broader context. We introduce an extension to the common English vocabulary that allows for nearly-complete indexing of USDA Soil Series Descriptions.
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