There are many different consumers of biomedical information, with varying immediate needs and role perspectives. Looking at two of these communities, we can see how information seeking behaviors and targeted resources differ.Â
The popularity of PubMed allows for the collection of vast amounts of usage data, and for the intelligent use of that data to improve the search experience.
The medicines and technologies being developed – to address the pandemic and the social wreckage it is leaving in its wake – are all protectable by IP and are critically important to start to get this thing behind us, or at least to progress towards caging the beast.
If you are considering using figures or graphics from a publication and are wondering if you need permission to include them, this blog post will help.
When you’re working in a fast-paced, but small life science company, there’s a chance your organization hasn’t thought about a copyright policy (yet.) Here’s why you need one.
Text mining in action: Learn how Eli Lilly and Georgetown University use Natural Language Processing to analyze relationships between publication volume and drug development success, and make patient care decisions.
Sharing content unlawfully undermines the culture of integrity that is valued by research organizations. While internal resources are usually limited in smaller companies, there are several ways to outsource copyright compliance efforts.
What happens when small organizations don’t have oversight of information resources? Heather Demaris, a knowledge and information management consultant, explores this topic.