Ahmed et al

 

In addition to Julie’s response below, if you are interested in reading more about how CENTRAL is created with respect to the indexing, please refer to the CENTRAL Creation Details file in The Cochrane Library at:

 

http://www.thecochranelibrary.com/view/0/CENTRALHelp.html

 

With best wishes

 

Carol

 

 

Carol Lefebvre

 

Independent Information Consultant, Lefebvre Associates Ltd, Oxford, UK

 

Co-Convenor, Cochrane Information Retrieval Methods Group

 

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From: Evidence based health (EBH) [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Julie Glanville
Sent: 25 September 2012 07:41
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Tagging of publication reports in bibliographic databases

 

Hello Ahmed, I can answer one of your questions I think - the indexing that you see on the records on CENTRAL which have been obtained from MEDLINE or EMBASE contain the indexing supplied by NLM or Elsevier - no additional MeSH or EMTREE subject headings are added by the publishers of the Cochrane Library. Other records on the Cochrane Library may have no indexing, author supplied indexing or indexing from another controlled vocabulary, depending on their origin. This variety of indexing within CENTRAL  means that searches need to be equally varied (sensitive)  to capture different vocabularies which may be in play. 



Regards

Julie

Julie Glanville
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On 24 September 2012 19:59, Ahmed Abou-Setta, M.D. <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

Hello,

 

The National Library of Medicine describes how the process used to make decisions on the Major Subject Heading (MeSH) tags used to classify and document citations of reports in Medline. Even so, I am not sure how this process is done in other major database (e.g. Embase, CINAHL, etc.). Even the Cochrane Library, which gets the majority of its citations from Medline and Embase, doesn’t clearly define how the process occurs. I have found a few publications on the development of Cochrane CENTRAL but do actual ‘real-time’ information. Does anyone know the general process of this occurs? Do screeners actually look at full-texts for publications? For publications where it is not clear from the title/ abstract/ journal-defined key words? For none at all, and all decisions are made on the bibliographic information submitted by the journals.

 

Thanks in advance for thoughts anyone would like to share (it could be personal information that is not documented).

 

Best wishes,

 

Ahmed