Hi all, I'm just wondering what everyone uses for publication alerts? I have been using PubCrawler to get publications that match my keywords, as they are published. I'm just wondering what all is out there and how it all stacks up.
Hi all, I'm just wondering what everyone uses for publication alerts? I have been using PubCrawler to get publications that match my keywords, as they are published. I'm just wondering what all is out there and how it all stacks up.
I'm using the pubmed RSS feeds : http://www.nlm.nih.gov/bsd/disted/pubmedtutorial/040_060.html
... and ... twitter.
I used to use RSS feeds of PubMed searches. However, there got to be so many alerts that I just ended up hitting "mark as read." That may depend somewhat on the topic.
Like Pierre, I use Twitter. Follow people with similar research interests and they will broadcast publications of interest to you.
Really though, I've given up on the whole idea of alerts. I just run search instead, "as and when" it occurs to me and bookmark whatever catches my eye.
Unsurprisingly, scholar.google.com gives alerts that are eerie in their goodness of fit to your existing publication record. Their site is also useful for citation-counting navel-gazing.
I discovered the Google scholar "updates" functionalities thanks to Jonathan Eisen's blog here: http://phylogenomics.blogspot.com/2012/08/wow-google-scholar-updates-big-step.html and here: http://phylogenomics.blogspot.com/2012/11/quick-post-nice-microbial-genomes.html
And I have to say I like it too!
I subscribe to Table of Contents of selected niche journals (you stumble across interesting papers you would miss otherwise), I rely on Twitter, however I access the stream via Prismatic and Flipboard (they apparently use two different sorting algorithms, which complement each other), plus I monitor bookmarking services (CiteULike, Mendeley, whatever is out there) of a few people relatively far away from my field.
For certain topics, I also check citations of a few key papers in the topic. However, this is not as regular and not as automated as I would like.
CiteUlike Watchlist but also Twitter
I use mendeley, beside it's regular searching capabilities you can join groups about specific topics where people add interesting papers about that particular topic.
I like the "My NCBI" tool - it sends me a monthly email, unfortunately PubMed can be a few months behind the actual article. I should probably try Google Scholar to compare. I also read a few blogs.
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Twitter is an unexpected response. How exactly do you use it to keep up to date on publications?
I put my publications of interest in delicious (it could be citeulike.org, etc... ), they are automatically shared on twitter with www.twitterfeed.com and my followers can catch some papers I've found interesting: e.g: https://en.twitter.com/yokofakun/status/243409971096723456
Ok! Good to know what to look out for!
what Neil said: "Follow people with similar research interests and they will broadcast publications of interest to you."
This is a great combination as twitter typically highlights the high-impact papers of general interest while a tailored pubmed RSS feed can give you more specific papers directly related to your current work.