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Plates vi & vii of the Edwin Smith Papyrus at the Rare Book Room, New York Academy of Medicine. Medical literature is the scientific literature of medicine: articles in journals and texts in books devoted to the field of medicine.
PubMed: biomedical literature citations and abstracts, including Medline—articles from (mainly medical) journals, often including abstracts. Links to PubMed Central and other full-text resources are provided for articles from the 1990s. PubMed Central: free, full-text journal articles; Site Search: NCBI web and FTP web sites; Books: online books
Google Scholar is a freely accessible web search engine that indexes the full text or metadata of scholarly literature across an array of publishing formats and disciplines. . Released in beta in November 2004, the Google Scholar index includes peer-reviewed online academic journals and books, conference papers, theses and dissertations, preprints, abstracts, technical reports, and other ...
In contrast with Google Scholar and PubMed, Semantic Scholar is designed to highlight the most important and influential elements of a paper. [13] The AI technology is designed to identify hidden connections and links between research topics. [14]
PubMed Central Canada (PMC Canada) was a Canadian national digital repository of peer-reviewed health and life sciences literature. It operated from 2010 to 2018. It joined Europe PubMed Central (formerly UK PubMed Central) as a member of the PubMed Central International network.
Europe PubMed Central (Europe PMC) is an open-access repository that contains millions of biomedical research works. It was known as UK PubMed Central until 1 November 2012. [ 2 ]
To generate full Template:Cite journal markup from a known PubMed Abstract number, use Wikipedia template filling tool; Another tool to generate Wikipedia citations from a PubMed ID or DOI, not using Cite journal template (in German) Old version, may work but not maintained; Biblio.php, an extension of Mediawiki, the wiki software used here at ...
Sister Mary Joseph Dempsey (born Julia Dempsey) was a Catholic nun and surgical assistant of William J. Mayo at St. Mary's Hospital in Rochester, Minnesota from 1890 to 1915.