Health & Environmental Research Online (HERO)


Glossary


This glossary will help you understand the terms and concepts used in HERO in the areas of library and information science and databases. If you would like to suggest a term for addition to this glossary, please send us your suggestions.

A B C D E F I L M N O P Q R S T U V W

Abstract   An abstract can be viewed as a miniature version of the paper. The scientific abstract provides a brief summary of each of the main sections of the paper: Introduction or Background, Materials and Methods, Results and Discussion.

A&I Database   An A&I - or Abstract and Indexing - database provides bibliographic citationsA nd abstracts of the literature of a discipline or subject area, as distinct from a retrieval service that provides information sources in full-text.

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Bibliography   A bibliography is a list of references about a particular subject. It can often be found at the end of a work listing all the other works the author consulted or cited within the paper.

Bioinformatics   Bioinformatics is the study of molecular biology with the use of information technologies such as databases, algorithms, visualization, and text mining.

Blog   A blog is a website frequently updated with different entries, links to other websites, and comments, all relating to a certain topic. The word blog is short for web log.

Boolean Operators   AND, OR, and NOT are Boolean Operators. These three words can be used to make a query in a literature search more narrow or broad, or to exclude certain results.

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Citation   A citation is a reference to another work that identifies it. A citation explicitly states who wrote the work, the complete title, what year it was published, and other publication information.

Classification   A classification system separates items into classes or groups in order to organize items in a library collection, index, or database.

Controlled Vocabulary   A controlled vocabulary is an established set of terms used for the purpose of having consistent subject headings, ease of searching, and overlap for synonymous search terms.

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Database   A database is a regularly updated record of references, abstracts, and citations with different searchable fields.

Data Visualization   Data visualization is a branch of bioinformatics that focuses on the graphical presentation of information, such as genomes, sequences, or MRIs.

Deep Web   The deep web makes up information on the internet that is accessible, but will not be found by regular search engines. The information stored in databases is considered to be a part of the Deep Web.

Delimiter   Delimiters are characters used to separate items in the same field in a database. In the HERO database, a semicolon is used as the delimiter.

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Evergreen   In database terms, evergreen means that the data is constantly being added. As new studies are published, they are added to HERO.

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Federated Searching   A Federated Search looks across multiple databases at the same time using only one search query.

Full Text   Full text is an entire work in a digital format. Full text articles are often included in a database along with each article's abstract and citation.

Full Text Searching   If a database utilizes full text searching the entire work will be searched instead of just selected fields such as author, title, and subject.

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Information Extraction   The parsing of an article and the recording of data related to the article and its underlying research.

Information Science   Information science is an interdisciplinary science primarily concerned with the analysis, collection, classification, manipulation, storage, retrieval and dissemination of information.

International Standard Serials Number (ISSN)   ISSN is a unique eight digit code that identifies periodicals.

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Link Resolver   Link resolvers are products used by libraries to automatically direct users to a URL where they can access the library's holdings when searching in a database.

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Metadata   Metadata is data about data. In a database, metadata is the information, such as author, title, and journal title, that accompanies all entries.

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Natural Language Processing   Natural language processing is the process of converting human language into a language understandable to computers.

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Ontology   An ontology is a controlled vocabulary that seeks to show how certain terms are related to one another.

Open URL Linking   When link resolvers automatically direct users to a URL where they can access their library's holdings when searching in a database.

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Peer-Reviewed Journal / Peer-Reviewed Literature   A peer-reviewed (or refereed) journal uses a formal approval process for acceptance of articles. An editor and one or more subject specialists reviews the article before it is accepted for publication. This process is intended to ensure that the article is accurate, well-researched, and contributes to the body of knowledge in the field. Peer reviewed scientific papers are papers published after they have been reviewed by other scientists, knowledgeable in the field of inquiry, to determine whether the studies they describe are of reasonable quality and the conclusions reported are supported by the evidence. Reputable scientific journals use a process of peer review before accepting a paper for publication. We use Ulrich's Periodicals Directory to determine which journals are peer-reviewed.

Personal Communication   Personal communications may be letters, memos, some electronic communications (e.g., email or messages from non-archived discussion groups or electronic bulletin boards), personal interviews, telephone conversations, etc.

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Query   A query is the information entered into a search field by the user that tells the computer what to search.

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Relational Database   A relational database groups search results together based on shared characteristics within a data set.

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Taxonomy   The principles of classification and the creation of an ordered system of grouping.

Text Clustering   When a large set of search results are returned after a query, text clustering can sort the results by categories.

Text Mining   Text mining is the parsing of text to find patterns and the analysis of those patterns either qualitatively or quantitatively.

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Unstructured Text Mining   Unstructured text mining is the parsing of text that has not been organized in any way. In a database, unstructured information would be that which has not been organized into specific fields (such as title, author, and keywords) but could still be useful for text mining.

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Variability   Refers to the range of toxic response or exposure. For example, the dose that might cause a toxic response can vary from one person to the next depending on factors such as genetic differences, preexisting medical conditions, etc. Exposure may vary from one person to the next depending on factors such as where one works, time spent indoors or out, where one lives, how much people eat or drink, etc.

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Web 2.0   This term is used to describe the collaborative and user-driven ways in which people use the internet and share information online. Wikis, blogs, RSS feeds, and social networking sites are examples of Web 2.0 technologies.

Wiki   A wiki is an application that is collaborative in nature, where anyone can add, delete, or edit content and the page's history is viewable to everyone.

Wildcard   Any symbol, often an asterisk (*), that represents any possible spelling used when searching to replace missing letters. Example: genom* would pull up results for genome and genomics.

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