23.03.2013 Views

Biomedical Engineering – From Theory to Applications

Biomedical Engineering – From Theory to Applications

Biomedical Engineering – From Theory to Applications

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

12<br />

Bireme<br />

http://regional.bv<br />

salud.org/php/in<br />

dex.php?lang=en<br />

Embase<br />

http://www.emb<br />

ase.com/info/<br />

<strong>Biomedical</strong> <strong>Engineering</strong> <strong>–</strong> <strong>From</strong> <strong>Theory</strong> <strong>to</strong> <strong>Applications</strong><br />

Latin<br />

Systematic Reviews,<br />

Clinical Trials, Evidence<br />

America and Summaries, Economic<br />

1967 Caribbean, Evaluations in Health,<br />

Portugal and Health Technology<br />

Spain Assessments, Clinical<br />

Practice Guidelines<br />

Agriculture & Food<br />

Sciences, Bioengineering<br />

& Biotechnology, Clinical<br />

Medicine, Computer<br />

Science & Technology,<br />

Dentistry, Earth &<br />

Environmental Sciences,<br />

Enginery, Evidence-Based<br />

Medicine, Geology, Life<br />

Sciences, Neurology &<br />

1988 Global Neurosciences, Nursing<br />

& Allied Health,<br />

Pharmacy &<br />

Pharmacology<br />

Philosophy & Religion,<br />

Physics, Psychology &<br />

Psychiatry, Social<br />

Sciences & the<br />

Humanities, Technical<br />

Sciences, Veterinary<br />

Medicine, Zoology<br />

19,643,741 of<br />

records<br />

1,749,767<br />

full text<br />

Over 100<br />

bibliographic<br />

and full-text<br />

databases<br />

Table 4. The most popular databases for biomedical literature (Date of access: March 2011).<br />

The Merriam Webster dictionary (2011) defines a reposi<strong>to</strong>ry as one that contains or s<strong>to</strong>res<br />

something nonmaterial. Reposi<strong>to</strong>ries of<br />

literature are unders<strong>to</strong>od as large files that s<strong>to</strong>re digital texts composed of a group of<br />

services designed <strong>to</strong> capture, s<strong>to</strong>re, manage, preserve and redistribute the documentation<br />

<strong>to</strong> a certain audience or a specific user community (Pappalardo and Fitzegerald, 2007).<br />

Emerged from the so-called e-print community, concerned <strong>to</strong> maximize the spread and<br />

impact of scientific works deposited in them (Melero, 2005). An e-print (e-paper) is the<br />

digital version of a research paper (usually a journal article, but could be a thesis, papers,<br />

book chapters, or book) is available online because it has been deposited in a digital<br />

reposi<strong>to</strong>ry (Swan and Brown, 2005), which comprises five components essential <strong>to</strong> its<br />

operation: interactivity, design, integration, aggregation and mobility. Digital versions of<br />

research papers called e-prints include both pre-prints (articles before they are evaluated<br />

by peers) and post-prints (version result of peer review).<br />

Reposi<strong>to</strong>ries whose main function the s<strong>to</strong>rage of files and their creation is linked with the<br />

movement of information from open access (open access), a term that describes the online<br />

public access without restriction <strong>to</strong> scientific articles (Suber et al., 2010 ), has two forms: free

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!