Peer-reviewed biology papers online?

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SUMMARY

This discussion focuses on effective strategies for finding peer-reviewed biology papers online, particularly for students in molecular and cell biology courses. Key resources highlighted include PubMed, which is essential for accessing a wide range of scientific literature, and PLoS journals for open-access articles. Users are advised to utilize specific search techniques, such as field descriptions and tags in PubMed, to enhance search relevance. The conversation emphasizes the importance of critically evaluating literature and not relying solely on one search engine for comprehensive research.

PREREQUISITES
  • Familiarity with PubMed and its functionalities
  • Understanding of open-access journals like PLoS Biology and PLoS One
  • Knowledge of citation formats, including BibTeX
  • Ability to critically evaluate peer-reviewed literature
NEXT STEPS
  • Learn advanced search techniques in PubMed, including the use of field descriptions and tags
  • Explore the PLoS website for additional open-access research articles
  • Research the differences between PubMed and Google Scholar for literature searches
  • Investigate how to effectively request copies of papers from authors via email
USEFUL FOR

Students in molecular and cell biology, researchers seeking peer-reviewed literature, and anyone looking to enhance their academic writing with credible sources.

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I am taking a first year molecular/cell biology course and the lab reports I write all require references to peer-reviewed and (preferably) up-to-date papers. Does anyone have suggestions for websites where I can find such papers, and 'how' to search for them?

One problem I'm encountering is that most too specialized for my needs. For example this first report I have to do is on a practical we did involving enzymes from fruits, basically we looked at the effects of pH and temperature on enzyme function. Now in talking about the theory of enzymes in the introduction, it would be easy to reference the prescribed textbook but I'm not allowed to - it has to be directly from published papers.

Thanks
 
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PubMed (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed) is the site most biology researchers use to search through the scientific literature.

You may also consider seeing if you textbook cites the primary literature as many provide a list of papers for further reading at the ends of their chapters.
 
PubMed will give citations and abstracts for both open-access and pay-walled papers. You can visit http://www.plos.org/ to see some open-access journals only. Try PLoS Biology and PLoS one.
 
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Some recent papers (those covered by the public access policy of the NIH of the United States of America) on PubMed are available free in their final accepted form, even though the nicely formatted journal version is behind a paywall. These papers appear in PubMed Central within 12 months after their appearance in the journal. When you search PubMed, a link to the free version appears at the top right of the page (not sure if this feature is in the Mobile version).

Here's an example http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22499176

As usual, just because it's published doesn't mean it's right, so read the peer-reviewed literature as critically as you would any other.

Ygggdrasil suggested looking at the references to original papers that are available in some textbooks. PubMed also makes some textbooks available free http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books

Many journals allow authors to post the final accepted manuscript on their website or other free archive, so googling can often bring those free versions up, even if they are not on PubMed Central.

You can email (addresses are usually available from the journal's website) the authors of papers for a copy if you need to read a paper that your library privileges don't give you access to. They are not obliged to reply, but in many cases authors will be delighted with a short and courteous email in which you say why you are interested in their paper, eg. for a school project.
 
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Well, if you require paper citations than PubMed is the way to go. For more general papers you can filter for reviews, but if you are citing a specific example it is always better to cite the original/best study. I never search in a limited set of journals, like JonMoulton suggests. If pay walls are an issue that can not be overcome (in my opinion they always should be overcome), you can filter for free full-texts.

You should learn how to use the Field Descriptions and Tags:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK3827/#_pubmedhelp_Search_Field_Descrip_
Useful ones are [ti] or [tiab], to search for keywords in titles or including abstracts only (thus giving more relevant results).
 
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Thanks very much everyone!
 
Don't forget about Google scholar.
 
What advantage does Google scholar have over Pubmed?
 
Monique said:
What advantage does Google scholar have over Pubmed?

My experience with pubmed is limited, and I've never reigstered an NCBI account, but here's what I notice with my shallow pubmed experience:

1) google scholar presents multiple versions, often including free manuscripts marked with [PDF] (so you know it's not just another intermediate paywall).

2) 'cited by' function right in the search results immediately tells you the impact the article and links you right to the citing articles, making citation tracking fast and easy.

3) wider scope. this can be an advantage and a disadvantage as it includes non-peer-reviewed resources like books. Not limited to biomedical.

4) "cite" function automatically gives the article citation to you in your choice of format including bibtex, endnote, etc for us LaTeX users.
 
  • #10
1) Pubmed as well
2) not in Pubmed, can be useful, I use Web of Knowledge to track citations
3) not useful for biomed literature research
4) PubMed as well

I'm not convinced :smile:

Can one use field descriptions and tags in Google Scholar, like in PubMed?
Search limiting to reviews?
Display full abstracts?
 
  • #11
PubMed displays results chronologically, so the first results are the most recent papers matching your search but not necessarily the most relevant. Google scholar, on the other hand, sorts by relevance so it may do a better job at finding the most relevant articles more quickly. I don't know if I trust the Google Scholar results to be as comprehensive as PubMed, however.

If you are looking for the most recent papers on a topic, PubMed is probably the tool to use. If you are looking for all of the papers published by a particular author, PubMed is probably the tool to use. However, if you're looking for a set of important papers on a particular topic, maybe here, Google Scholar has an advantage.
 
  • #12
I find it dangerous when a search engine determines what is the most relevant paper. I rather have a chronological order and know how the research progressed on a topic. I do see how it can be useful for a quick paper find.
 
  • #13
Monique said:
I find it dangerous when a search engine determines what is the most relevant paper. I rather have a chronological order and know how the research progressed on a topic. I do see how it can be useful for a quick paper find.
I don't know if or how many of the problems concerning google scholar have been fixed since this report.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1324783/

I just did a simple search for the same topic and google scholar's most recent paper was from 1996, while PubMed had dozens starting in 2013. Chipotle, since one of the preferences stated is that you use the more current studies, you might want to stick with PubMed.
 
  • #14
Great find, thanks Evo!
 
  • #15
how do you get bibtex out of pubmed?
 
  • #16
also, how do you do 1)?
 
  • #17
Pythagorean said:
how do you get bibtex out of pubmed?
For the rare times someone might want it.

http://www.hubmed.org/
 
  • #18
I mean in pubmed. The purpose is to have it all in one place when you're doing a literature search (a benefit of Google scholar).

I always use bibtex for both official manuscripts and school papers.
 
  • #19
Pythagorean said:
I mean in pubmed. The purpose is to have it all in one place when you're doing a literature search (a benefit of Google scholar).

I always use bibtex for both official manuscripts and school papers.
But using google scholar severely limits which papers you can even find, making it a rather useless tool except for high school kids, laymen and undergrads that don't really care, IMO.

You asked what would do bibtex functions for Pubmed so I gave you an option. Professionals use Pubmed for serious research.
 
  • #20
  • #21
here's another paper you can find in Scholar, but not in PubMed:

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167278910002617

despite PubMed carrying other Physica D papers.
 
  • #22
a 2012 study:

CONCLUSIONS:
PubMed searches and Google Scholar searches often identify different articles. In this study, Google Scholar articles were more likely to be classified as relevant, had higher numbers of citations and were published in higher impact factor journals. The identification of frequently cited articles using Google Scholar for searches probably has value for initial literature searches.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22925384

:approve:


Anyway... the most silly thing you can do is swear yourself to one search engine and eschew another, especially when you want to make sure your claim "this is the first time this phenomena has been found" is true! Just like navigation on the boat, don't rely on just one system.
 
  • #23
Sciencedirect is a web search site that also searches for non-peer reviewed articles, books, etc.

To my knowledge Physica D is not indexed by Medline/PubMed, I would imagine since it primarily would not have papers that fit PubMed.
 
  • #25
Pythagorean said:
a 2012 study:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22925384

:approve:Anyway... the most silly thing you can do is swear yourself to one search engine and eschew another, especially when you want to make sure your claim "this is the first time this phenomena has been found" is true! Just like navigation on the boat, don't rely on just one system.
LOL, you must have used google scholar, so missed the later 2013 study. :biggrin:

CONCLUSIONS:
Has Google Scholar improved enough to be used alone in searching for systematic reviews? No. GS' constantly-changing content, algorithms and database structure make it a poor choice for systematic reviews. Looking for papers when you know their titles is a far different issue from discovering them initially. Further research is needed to determine when and how (and for what purposes) GS can be used alone. Google should provide details about GS' database coverage and improve its interface (e.g., with semantic search filters, stored searching, etc.). Perhaps then it will be an appropriate choice for systematic reviews.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23923099

No search engine is going to list everything. For biology, which is the subject of this thread, I'd have to go with PubMed to make sure that the results I get are the most current and in an acceptable peer reviewed journal. We have people all of the time posting conference papers and some student's thesis not realizing it's not ever been published in a peer reviewed journal.
 
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  • #26
Pythagorean said:
sure it does:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed?term="Physica D"[Journal]

Nonlinear phenomena is rife with biological applications (that's where my research is)
No, they don't.

Not currently indexed for MEDLINE.Only articles related to space life sciences were indexed.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nlmcatalog?cmd=historysearch&querykey=2

They only pick up a few papers. They do not index the entire journal AFAIK. Of course now someone will find where they have added the journal. :-p
 
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  • #27
  • #28
Evo said:
LOL, you must have used google scholar, so missed the later 2013 study. :biggrin:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23923099

No search engine is going to list everything. For biology, which is the subject of this thread, I'd have to go with PubMed to make sure that the results I get are the most current and in an acceptable peer reviewed journal. We have people all of the time posting conference papers and some student's thesis not realizing it's not ever been published in a peer reviewed journal.
naw, they're just saying two different things. In fact, your paper is saying exactly what I said. Don't use it alone. As I've demonstrated, you don't want to use PubMed alone either, at least not for computational/mathematical/theoretical neuroscience. That's a general rule any professional should follow.

Biology is too big of a subject to say, "go with this, go with that". You have to know more specifics.
 
  • #29
Pythagorean said:
Your link doesn't work (I don't have your cookies). I'll take your word for it.

I wonder how this one was indexed then:

[PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11540720
I searched on their journal list. It could be that they only pick up papers that meet their criteria, I don't know.
 
  • #30
It's because of the specific needs of the OP that I believe searching in PubMed would be best for his needs. If you just want to throw out a net and catch anything on a particular topic, then no need to care about the search source. But he's a first year undergrad that specifically needs current and peer reviewed sources, the best source for that would be PubMed. They don't need to worry if it's a paper in a proper peer reviewed journal, or if they are accessing current papers, it's already sorted for them.

My example earlier of searching on a specific topic in google scholar, yeah, they returned the most highly cited papers...that were 20 years old and cited 20 years ago and new technology and research has made many of those papers obsolete. But you wouldn't know that there were newer studies using google scholar, the newest paper in the first few pages was from 1996. Oh, but very highly cited. :biggrin:

So, if you are just doing blanket searches for anything topic related and have plenty of time, using multiple searches will find the most papers. For this thread OP's specific situation, I've got to go with PubMed.
 

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