---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Sun, 13 Jun 1999 22:54:36 -0400 From: Steve Lawrence <lawrence@RESEARCH.NJ.NEC.COM> Subject: ResearchIndex (CiteSeer): Scientific Literature Digital Library ResearchIndex (formerly CiteSeer), a digital library of scientific literature that automatically performs citation indexing is available at: http://researchindex.com/ ResearchIndex aims to improve the dissemination and feedback of scientific literature, and to provide improvements in functionality, usability, availability, cost, comprehensiveness, efficiency, and timeliness. The ResearchIndex software is available without cost for non-commercial use. The demonstration service indexes over 200,000 computer science articles (containing over 2 million citations). Many digital libraries of scientific literature are available (e.g. LANL e-Print archive, ACM DL, IEEE DL, UCSTRI, CORR, ML Papers, NCSTRL, LTRS, HP Bib, CS Bibliographies, NZDL etc.). These services offer varying degrees of functionality, comprehensiveness, and freshness. Rather than creating just another digital library, ResearchIndex provides algorithms, techniques, and software that can be used in other digital libraries. ResearchIndex indexes Postscript and PDF research articles and provides: - Autonomous Citation Indexing (ACI). ResearchIndex uses ACI to autonomously create a citation index that can be used for literature search and evaluation. Compared to traditional citation indices, ACI provides improvements in cost, availability, comprehensiveness, efficiency, and timeliness. - Information on all cited documents, not just indexed documents. ResearchIndex computes citation statistics and related documents for all articles cited in the database, not just the indexed articles. - Reference linking. As with many online publishers, ResearchIndex allows browsing the database using citation links. - Citation context - ResearchIndex can show the context of citations to a given paper, allowing a researcher to quickly and easily see what other researchers have to say about an article of interest (useful for literature search and evaluation). - Awareness and tracking - ResearchIndex provides automatic notification of new citations to given papers, and new papers matching a user profile. Machine learning is used to automatically learn user profiles. - Related documents - ResearchIndex locates related documents using citation and word frequency measures and displays an active and continuously updated bibliography for each document. - Similar documents - ResearchIndex computes the percentage of matching sentences between documents, allowing, for example, the detection of minor revisions to a paper. - Full-text indexing - ResearchIndex indexes the full-text of the entire articles and citations. Full Boolean, phrase and proximity search is supported. - Query-sensitive summaries - ResearchIndex provides the context of how query terms are used in articles, instead of a generic summary, improving the efficiency of search. - Citation graph analysis - ResearchIndex analyzes the graph of citations, e.g. to identify authoritative and review style articles. - Page images - ResearchIndex allows quick and easy viewing of page images. - Up-to-date - ResearchIndex is continuously updated 24 hours a day. - Powerful search - e.g. ResearchIndex allows using author initials to narrow a citation search. - Autonomous location of articles - ResearchIndex uses search engines, crawling, and mailing list monitoring to efficiently locate papers on the Web. ResearchIndex can also be used on existing digital libraries. - Source code available - The full source code of ResearchIndex is available without cost for non-commercial use. A demonstration service is at: http://researchindex.com/ For more details or to obtain the software see http://www.neci.nec.com/~lawrence/researchindex.html http://www.neci.nec.com/~lawrence/aci.html The following papers contain details of the system: "Digital libraries and Autonomous Citation Indexing", Volume 32, Number 6, 67-71, 1999. "CiteSeer: An automatic citation indexing system", Digital Libraries, June 1998 [shortlisted for best paper]. "CiteSeer: An autonomous Web agent for automatic retrieval and identification of interesting publications", Autonomous Agents, May 1998. "CiteSeer: Autonomous Citation Indexing and Literature Browsing Using Citation Context", Technical Report, NEC Research, 1997. We currently only have a small capacity machine on our external network for demonstration. The demonstration service indexes over 200,000 computer science articles. Credits: We would like to thank Joshua Alspector, Jose Nelson Amaral, Anders Ardo, Shumeet Baluja, Arunava Banerjee, Eric Baum, Robert Cameron, Rich Caruana, Ingemar Cox, Scott Fahlman, Gary Flake, Bill Gear, Paul Ginsparg, Eric Glover, Alan Gottlieb, Steve Hanson, Haym Hirsh, Steve Hitchcock, Paul Kantor, Jon Kleinberg, Bob Krovetz, Andrea LaPaugh, Michael Lesk, Andrew McCallum, Steve Minton, Tom Mitchell, Michael Nelson, Craig Nevill-Manning, Andrew Ng, Max Ott, Brian Pinkerton, Alexandrin Popescul, Ben Schafer, Bruce Schatz, Terrence Sejnowski, Warren Smith, Dagobert Soergel, Amanda Spink, Harold Stone, Valerie Tucci, Lyle Ungar, David Waltz, Ian Witten, and Peter Yianilos for useful comments and suggestions. -- Steve Lawrence - http://www.neci.nec.com/~lawrence/