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Support : eNewsletters : Chronolog Archives
From the Editor For more than 40 years, Dialog’s dedication to the global community of information and knowledge professionals has meant ensuring you receive the latest information about ongoing enhancements to our services. Our success in that venture is dependent on having up–to-date contact information for you and your colleagues who use Dialog services. We encourage you to update your individual user contact information online. Update your user profile by Friday, September 25, 2009, and we’ll enter your name in a drawing for an Amazon Kindle™2 (US $300 value) to be held September 30, 2009. In that same vein of keeping you better informed, we’re pleased to announce two new e-newsletters from Dialog. ProQuest Product Update (Corporate & Professional) will focus on ProQuest for corporate customers to provide details on ProQuest products and how Dialog and DataStar are complementary. Eye on Innovation illustrates ways Dialog content and special features provide competitive intelligence that you may not find elsewhere. In this issue, we focus on Intellectual Property—new training classes on patents and trademarks, articles on patent files and patent searching tips, new patent search aids and even using energy and environmental files for prior art searching. Also in this issue, be sure to read “Let Dialog help you go green” to see all the ways Dialog content covers energy and the environment and “The four-point Dialog advantage” with tips on using these files. With government spending increasing to fuel economies worldwide, Dialog and DataStar content in the “green” arena is sure to play an even greater role in corporate research in the months and years ahead.
Let Dialog help you go green
A number of companies have already embraced environmentally-friendly ways of doing business. A few examples illustrate how companies worldwide from retailers to cleaning products manufacturers to snack-food makers are incorporating “green technology” into their business models.
How does Dialog fit into the green movement? Green business and industry news And, if you’re looking for information about doing business in under-developed countries, World News Connection (WNC)® (File 985) offers extensive information from local media sources worldwide that focuses specifically on significant scientific, political, technical and environmental issues in these countries. Energy and environmental information To examine pollutants, polluters, clean-up practices, detection and control technologies, recycling and waste disposal procedures, and pivotal issues linking industry and the environment, try Pollution Abstracts (File 41) or CAB Abstracts (File 50). Moreover, corporations are working to reduce emissions harmful to the environment and are developing pollution prevention strategies. For energy science and technology, Energy Science & Technology (File 103) is worth a search. Specialized databases for green research Intellectual Property Technology advances are leading corporations to increase the amount of alternative energy they use. Government incentives are making alternative energy, such as solar and wind power, economically feasible. Examples of green technology now include development of alternative fuels, new means of generating energy and energy efficiency, green building, environmentally preferred purchasing, green chemistry and green nanotechnology to name a few. It appears as if this field will bring innovation and changes in daily life of a similar magnitude to the "information technology" explosion over the last two decades. In these early stages, it is impossible to predict what "green technology" may eventually encompass; however, Dialog is just the service to use to keep you abreast of progress and future innovation.
New: Web page highlights database changes A new Web page that displays changes to all output format when databases are reloaded or new files are added is now available to provide advance notice to Dialog and DataStar customers who may have internal post-processing systems impacted by changes to Dialog output format, as well as to third-party organizations. (Third-party consumers are producers of post-processing packages like ProCite, EndNote, RefWorks or companies who have a direct data feed from Dialog). Each entry on the Database Changes page lists the reloaded or new database, all output format changes, a targeted release date and the date the file is actually released. Currently, the page lists all changes to reloaded files for the month of July 2009 with the most recently reloaded file listed first. The page will be updated as changes occur, and an archive of past month changes will also be available. In addition, a message will point the 1,300-plus customers who subscribe to Bluesheet and Datasheet feeds to a message via an RSS datafeed when additions are made to the Database Changes Web page. There is also a link to Database Changes from the Dialog Bluesheets page.
Free Files of the Month For the month of September Dialog is pleased to offer several free files:
Food Science and Technology Abstracts FSTA is a powerful tool for researching medical aspects of food, food ingredients and nutrition and includes articles such as “ Iron deficiency and obesity: the contribution of inflammation and diminished iron absorption” (Nutrition Reviews). FSTA also covers all agricultural topics which directly relate to the food chain and so it complements databases such as CAB Abstracts (File 50) and Agricola (File 10). Equally for chemists, FSTA covers many chemistry journal articles that have aspects relevant to food products or ingredients. In addition to journal articles, FSTA also provides information on thousands of food science patents, plus food-related standards and legislation, conference proceedings, reviews, reports, books and theses. The truly international coverage, encompassing a number of less-indexed titles, also sets it apart. CLAIMS databases Complete Assignee Name changes
Granted patent records from 2001 forward also include:
Published Applications from 2001 forward also include:
CLAIMS®/Current Patent Legal Status (File 123) contains post-issuance legal status information for U.S. patents. Coverage includes: certificates of correction, reassignment, reexamination requests and certificates, extensions, expirations, reinstatements, reissue requests, adverse decisions on interference actions and disclaimer/dedication data.
Communicating Dialog value to our customers: An interview with our Marketing team The direction of any company depends heavily on its marketing team. Our interview this month focuses on the Dialog Marketing team, led by Vice President Libby Trudell. We’d like to introduce you to the group that works to focus Dialog’s direction to customer needs. Q: What do you see as the team’s main mission? A: Our Dialog and DataStar services help professionals find authoritative answers through precise search and comprehensive content enriched by ProQuest. As the marketing team, our mission is to reinforce that value to our customers. We see this value as precision searching against authoritative content to access global patent, scientific, health and news databases. And, with Dialog’s deep content, to provide answers to drive scientific discovery, validate new ideas and commercialize products. To support this value, we provide global consultations, education and training. Q: Who is on the marketing team? A: The team is composed of five permanent members who are aided by several other part-time members. Libby Trudell leads the group and has more than 30 years experience in the information industry, 26 of which have been with Dialog. She has an MLS from Simmons.
Q: What tasks support your mission? A: We work with all internal groups across the Dialog business, particularly sales, as well as customers and professional groups to keep them up to date on what’s happening throughout Dialog and ProQuest. We manage brand identity, advertising, events and trade shows, pricing plans, policies and guidelines, the Quantum2 Leadership Development Program, the Graduate Education Program, and the global Customer Advisory Board. We also create customer and industry communications to keep our customers informed of the newest developments at Dialog and also how Dialog and ProQuest complement each other. Some of the special projects we work on are the database promotions, regional training Updates worldwide, liaison with professional organizations like SLA and AIIP, and much more. Maintaining the Dialog Web site and planning new product and content launches is also our responsibility. Every day is a new challenge and offers unique experiences. Q: Why is your team’s role so important to Dialog customers? And, what makes your job at Dialog so exciting? A: We reinforce the value of Dialog by the quality of Dialog customer service, training, account relationships and marketing support. To us, that is very important work. Our work is also extremely diverse. Because Dialog content is greatly varied and so are our customers, we could be working on a patent quick reference card or a workbook on scientific searching one day, and the next day presenting to information professionals at SLA on creating best practices for information services. We may be writing newsletters like the Chronolog each month or creating new communication tools we think our customers will find useful. Some days it’s hard to keep up with all the different types of tasks, but that’s what makes it so interesting and fun.
Science content notes Several databases in the SciTech area have been reloaded. You can find specific changes on the new Database Changes page and on individual Bluesheets for the files. Here are some notes on the reloaded files.
The four-point Dialog advantage We’ve touched on some of the databases in “Let Dialog help you go green” that will provide valuable research to answer these questions. In this article we’ll look at some of the search advantages Dialog provides—indexing, coding and special search tools. Focus your search with Dialog indexing Let’s look at an example. In Ei Compendex® (File 8), entering “biofuels” as our search term and displaying the records in the free Format 8, we see titles like “The development of biofuels in Asia” and “Biorefineries for biofuel upgrading: A critical review”—articles right on target. Looking further at the descriptors and identifiers in these records, we find more search terms such as “Energy security,” “Indonesia,” “Social and environmental impact,” “Thailand,” “Transport fuels,” “Bio oil,” “Bio-chemicals,” “Biomass conversion,” “Biorefineries” and many more. Using these terms, we can take our search into any specific aspect of biofuels or even information about biofuels in a particular country. In addition, many databases are equipped with coding systems to focus the search in a category of information; for instance, from this same search we have codes: 525.1 (Energy Resources), 524 (Solid Fuels) or 523 (Liquid Fuels). And, you’ve learned all this from one search in one database! Search multiple databases Tools described here only touch the surface of all that Dialog has to offer. Sign up for a free online class to learn more or take advantage of training workbooks and At a glance modules to increase your Dialog searching expertise. Dialog doesn’t just provide world-class content, it also gives you the tools to build your expertise at the same time!
Latin American countries added to INPADOC According to a Newsflash from the European Patent Office (EPO), “the nations of this geopolitical region have been putting a lot of effort into improving their intellectual property systems to attract worldwide interest in [Latin American] patent protection.” INPADOC/Family and Legal Status (File 345) country coverage already includes over 706,000 Brazilian, Argentine, Mexican and Uruguayan patents. Beginning in late 2008, the EPO began enhancing Latin American coverage by adding patent data from 10 additional Latin American countries — Chile, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Panama and Peru. In the past nine months, over 15,000 patents have been added for these new countries, bringing Latin American coverage to almost three quarters of a million patents found in 600,000 INPADOC families. This means much of this coverage represents new inventions originating in Latin America. The EPO recently announced patents from Bolivia and Colombia will be added later this year. The updated INPADOC (File 345) Bluesheet lists all countries whose patents are available in the database. INPADOC now covers 96 countries, including EPO and WIPO/PCT publications. In 2009, legal status was added for Chinese and Russian documents, bringing the total legal status coverage to 43 countries. In addition to INPADOC’s extensive country coverage and clustering of patents into INPADOC families, abstracts and cited patents are provided for many documents, making this the “go to” file for international patent coverage.
A Proximal and a Distal Tip
I am a slow study. That is, it takes me some time to absorb a concept and then work with it. As a searcher for a large company of researchers, I struggled with trying to identify a concept and flesh it out while the requester patiently starred at me. So, I used three stacks of paper, each of a different color. On the first sheet I recorded notes while the requester told me about the invention. Once done, I would then take a sheet from the second stack, and here I would use my scribblings to lay out the concepts into rows. I then pulled various thesauri and other reference materials off the shelf and put synonyms and concept codes in the appropriate column, spelled out the inevitable abbreviations and corrected the misspellings. The third time is a charm By the time I went online, the requester was frantic! You can see why he hated me! But, by now the online search was the fourth time I visited these terms and along the way I could think about Plan B (for when Plan A didn’t work), plus it helped me to understand what the person really wanted. Not that I always found what the requester wanted, but this approach, while frustrating for some, gave me time to understand the concepts, most of which were new to me. Patents are particularly difficult to search because the inventor is trying to prove she is the first person to have created the idea and, of course, there are not terms that adequately describe it, so why not make up something? Worse, think of the problem the patent offices have with indexing new technology! They have to apply classification codes to all of these inventions that are, by definition, novel and may not be adequately described by an English term. My methodology also forced me to use various sources and the class codes on which the patent offices spend a lot of time. So, of course, one day I asked the requester why he loathed me so much. He said, “Well, one time, and one time only, you found something I would never have found, so I feel I must have you do a search...but I still hate you.” After that, we became friends, though I am sure he still swears out loud whenever he thinks of me and my slow way of learning but obviously redeeming way of searching.
Derwent World Patents Index® enhancements Did you know ... DWPI timeliness has improved; Taiwan coverage has increased; DWPI manual codes for 2009 are updated; and national patent office indexing is included for the Japanese, European and U.S. patent offices. 1. Timeliness of updates Progress has also been made on improving the completeness of DWPI records. This is an important measurement as it allows you to see when all of the available patents in a publication period have been loaded into DWPI and as an internal measure it helps DWPI indexers better manage the content being processed. 2. Taiwan coverage
3. Manual Codes revised
There were 789 changes to the Codes, broken down as follows:
Table 1: 2009 Manual Code Changes Another important change this year has been to the manual code descriptions and scope notes. By providing more information for the internal teams applying the codes, the understanding and consistency of application is improved. If you are using the codes, the additional information helps you find the most relevant codes for your search query. Note : Thomson Reuters is asking for customer input for the 2010 manual code revision of the Electrical Patents Index (EPI) and Chemical Patents Index (CPI) Manual Code and Fragmentation Code. Read more. 4. National patent office indexing
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New: Web page highlights database changes Communicating Dialog value to our customers: An interview with our Marketing team Intellectual Property Content Updates Business & News Content Updates Save time and money when limiting by date
October Free File of the Month The American Business Directory (File 531) containing information on more than 14 million U.S. business establishments will be offered as a free file for the month of October. Entries contain company address, current address, telephone number, employment data, key contact and title, primary Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) code, yellow pages and brand/trade name information, actual and estimated financial data and corporate linkages. You can search up to $100 (connect time or DialUnits) in the file for free in October. Output and Alerts costs are not included. See an Overview of File 531 to learn more about this comprehensive company database on Dialog.
Trademark templates revised Our three comprehensive trademark templates have been revised to reflect recent reloads of Finland (File 679) and the International Register (File 671). The revised templates are now available on DialogLink 5. The DialogLink 5 Report Templates page has also been updated. Read general information about the three trademark templates.
Dialog Chronolog (File 410) updated File 410 has been updated with searchable editions of the April-June Chronolog and the third quarter issue of Training Updates. File 410 is a free file.
Updating change to Piers Imports/Exports ( Latin America) Piers Exports (Latin America) (File 572) and Piers Imports ( Latin America) (File 574) are changing from weekly to monthly delivery. U.S Piers Exports (File 571) and U.S. Piers Imports (File 573) continue to update weekly. The Bluesheets for File 572 and 574 have been updated accordingly.
Three peas from one pod—Dialog, DataStar and Professional ABI/INFORM Complete from ProQuest Precision searching in broad A&I literature on Dialog/DataStar and the ability to readily locate the fulltext of these items via Professional ABI/INFORM Complete is a powerful combination. ABI/INFORM Complete contains more than 4,000 titles and the fulltext of 2,700 of those titles. The content is the most comprehensive combination of business and economics information including business conditions, market trends, competitive product information, corporate strategies and tactics, management practice and theory, technology and human resources. In addition to access to millions of much-coveted full-text articles from thousands of scholarly journals, ABI Complete also provides access to global newspapers, full-text dissertations in the area of business, market reports, business case studies, statistics, conference proceedings and more. Dialog and ABI Complete complement each other in their sources. For instance, Dialog has the fulltext of the Harvard Business Review and other full-text titles like Newsweek and The Economist. Together, the collection cannot be matched. New content in ABI Complete
Most of these in-depth reports, averaging 60 pages, have monthly updates and deliver analysis of: SWOT, market trends, forecasts, and competitive data. There are currently 618 reports available with no embargo, covering 100 countries and 25 regions. They are available in Professional ABI/INFORM Complete. In addition, the BMI publication, Corporate Financing Week has been added. Business Intelligence on Dialog/DataStar, ABI/INFORM Complete Combine Dialog resources with new sources, the full-text information and the valuable charts, graphs and images on ABI Complete and you’ve eliminated the need for multiple databases from multiple vendors to cover your business and industry needs.
Training Schedule Register for online sessions to increase your expertise in searching patents with tips from Derwent on new F-terms and other classification searching in Derwent World Patents Index® (File 351) and Derwent World Patents Index® First ViewSM (File 331). Attend an overview of Innography to learn how you can use this intellectual property business intelligence application to more easily manage, protect and leverage your patent portfolios. New Quick Guide
Introducing Quantum2 coaches With a B.A. in English and an MLS, Pat has been with Dialog since 1994 and a Quantum2 coach since 2001 when Quantum was reactivated as Quantum2. At Dialog she has held positions in account management and training. Before coming to Dialog, she also worked in corporate libraries in energy, manufacturing and consulting industries.
Dialog Search Tip: Using the Thesaurus in FSTA Food Science and Technology Abstracts™’s up-to-date and detailed thesaurus makes it simple to search for food–related topics in a focused way and gives it an advantage for food professionals over larger more general databases. Searchers will find food-specific terms in the FSTA thesaurus that aren’t present in the indexing of other scientific databases. Try out the thesaurus in FSTA (File 51), the free file of the month for September.
DataStar Search Tip: Using the .W. Command In Advanced Search in DataStarWeb, you can use the .W. command to search an indexed term as a single word. For example, if you are searching for a journal called Blood, entering the search string "blood.so." will retrieve any journal with the word blood in it (e.g., blood-pressure, blood-cells etc.). However, you can limit to only journals with the one word title Blood with the following search string: BLOOD.W..SO. You can use the .W. command with any field. For example, in MEDLINE if you want to search for just the descriptor asthma, not exercise-induced-asthma, enter the following search string: ASTHMA.W..DE. |
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