Current awareness services are tools you can use to keep up to
date with the latest professional literature in your field of
interest. There are a few different types of current awareness
services available and different information providers may refer
to their current awareness tools using different names.
Search
alert services allow
you to automatically run saved database searches with the results
delivered directly to your email or to the Health SmartLibrary
(HSL) home page.
Citation alert services enable
you to track new articles that cite an article you have chosen
by sending you an e-mail every time the article has
been cited.
Journal Issue or Table of Contents (TOC) services
are offered by many professional journals. With TOC alerts
the latest table of contents is sent to you via e-mail or RSS feed.
RSS Feeds push updates of web pages and blogs to your RSS reader so you don't have to check each individual site for updates. For more information, see our guide to RSS and Atom Feeds.
Here
are some of the more popular services available with step-by-step
instructions on how to use each.
You
will find several brief, step-by-step instructional videos throughout
this guide. Click the projector icon to launch each video. Videos
will open in a new browser window and contain audio narration
so be sure to turn on your speakers.
The Stay Current feature of the Health SmartLibrary can be used as a search alert service or as a tool to track the latest five articles added to PubMed from specific journals. Stay Current always
appears in the right-hand column of the Galter Library home page.
You can use Stay Current to construct current awareness searches
which run automatically in PubMed every day with results delivered
directly to your HSL home page after you’ve logged in to
the web site. Like any current awareness service, the challenge
is to create the best search strategy that will retrieve your desired
results. Since Stay Current searches PubMed, you may
retrieve better results if you first search PubMed and then copy
your search statement to the Stay Current search once you’ve
determined that your search strategy will retrieve the results
you seek.
To set up a subject search using the Stay Current feature of HSL:
Review your results. If your results aren’t what
you expected, modify your search terms.
When you have your desired results, copy your entire
search statement.
Click "Customize" in the Stay Current section
of the Health SmartLibrary.
Click "Add New Search Term".
Paste your PubMed search statement and click "Add".
Search results will appear the next time you access
the HSL home page.
To track the latest five articles added to PubMed from a specific journal:
Log in to the Health SmartLibrary.
Click "Customize" in the Stay Current section of the Health SmartLibrary.
Click "Add New Search Term".
Enter either the full name of the journal or its official abbreviation followed by [journal] e.g. Am J Nephrol[Journal] Or american journal of nephrology[journal]
Click "Add" .
Citations to the latest five articles added to PubMed will appear the next time you access the HSL home page.
There are two ways to keep up to date with PubMed. You can either create a My NCBI account and create email alerts or you can create an RSS feed based on your search terms and have the results delivered to your RSS reader.
To use My NCBI:
Create a My NCBI account
Sign in to My NCBI
Run your search in PubMed
Click Save Search
Choose "yes" when asked "Would you like to receive e-mail updates of new search results?"
Specify the frequency, format, and maximum number of citations you would like to receive per alert
You can also set up RSS feeds to automatically retrieve the latest articles into your RSS reader. To set up a feed:
Run your search in PubMed
Choose RSS Feed from the "Send To" menu
Choose the maximum number of citations to be retrieved
Name your feed
Click "Create Feed"
A new page with an orange XML icon will appear
Use your RSS reader to discover the feed on this page
Ovid offers a current awareness service called AutoAlert (SDI). "SDI" is the acronym for selective dissemination of information. Your search strategy, saved as an AutoAlert (SDI) in Ovid, will be run automatically whenever the database it searches is updated. The newest citations that meet the saved search criteria are emailed automatically to your e-mail address. When you created your Health SmartLibrary account, you were asked “Would you like a personal OVID account to save searches and/or receive OVID auto-alerts?” Before you can save searches and create AutoAlerts in Ovid you must be sure that you answered “yes” to this question. If you’re not sure, log in to HSL, and choose “Personal Information” from the “Customize” menu.
To set up an AutoAlert:
Log in to the Health SmartLibrary.
Run a search in Ovid MEDLINE (or
another database provided by Ovid).
Click on “Save Search History”.
Choose AutoAlert (SDI) as the way to save your search.
Name your search and provide comments if applicable.
Fill out the rest of the form including email address, and
output format.
You will receive an email with links to new citations matching your search criteria each time the database is updated.
Use PubCrawler to
set up current awareness searches for PubMed and other NCBI databases
such as GenBank. With this service, you can choose how often you
want your queries to run in PubMed. To use PubCrawler:
ScienceDirect is
an information provider with a searchable gateway containing links
to individual Elsevier electronic journals. Three current
awareness options are available through ScienceDirect: Search Alerts,
Journal Issue Alerts, and Citation Alerts. You must create
a personal ScienceDirect account to initiate any of these services. Please
note that your search alerts will be limited to only those journal
titles available through ScienceDirect.
To set up a Search Alert:
Log in to ScienceDirect.
Choose "Search" from the main menu.
Run your search.
Click "Save as Search Alert" which appears above your list of results.
Fill out the "Save as Search Alert" form.
Be sure to enter your desired frequency schedule.
Click "Save Alert"
A Journal Issue Alert notifies you by e-mail when a new issue
of a particular journal becomes available on ScienceDirect. To create
a journal issue alert:
Log in to ScienceDirect.
Choose "Alerts" from the main menu.
Under Volume/Issue Alerts click on "Select
the journals/book series" you are interested in to begin
receiving Volume/Issue Alerts.
Click "Add" next to journals of interest. Note
that full-text access is only available for titles displaying
a green page icon.
Click "Save".
You will receive an email as new issues are made available
on ScienceDirect.
A Citation Alert notifies you by e-mail when an article you select
is cited by new articles added to ScienceDirect. To create a citation
alert:
Log in to ScienceDirect.
Choose "Alerts" from the main menu.
Find the article you wish to monitor by either searching the
database or browsing the journal issues.
View the article in either "Abstract" or "Abstract+References"
view.
Choose "Save as Citation Alert".
Fill out the resulting form.
Click "Save Alert".
You will be informed every time that article has been cited
in a ScienceDirect journal.
You can save literature searches using Web of Science just like
you would in any of the other alerting services. Web of Science
also offers a citation alert service. If you want to be informed
every time an article is cited, you should use the Citation Alert
feature in Web of Science. With this feature, you specify the article(s)
to be monitored and an email will be sent to you every time that
article is cited.
To set up an e-mail alert in Web of Science you will need to :
Go to Web of Science and register for a personal account.
Sign in to Web
of Science.
Run your search.
Click "Search History" at the top of your results
page.
Click "Save History".
Fill out the requested information on the "Save Search
History" form.
Be sure to check the box marked "Send Me E-mail Alerts".
Click "Save".
You will receive an email either weekly or monthly with updated
search results.
To create a Citation Alert:
Sign-in to Web of Science and run your search.
Mark the citation by clicking in the checkbox of the citation
you want to monitor.
Click on the title of the article to view the entire record.
Click on "Create Citation Alert".
You will automatically receive an e-mail alert every time the article is cited.
Faculty
of 1000 is an online literature evaluation service, offering
a systematic and comprehensive approach to identifying important
research in the biological sciences. Researchers provide commentaries
and evaluations of the most important papers they read, typically
submitting 2-4 commentaries per month.
To create an alert in Faculty of 1000:
Register for a personal account and log on.
Click on "Advanced Search".
Run your search.
Review your results and refine your search if necessary.
Click "Store this search".
Fill out the form. Be sure to specify your preferred e-mail
frequency.
Click "Store".
In addition to the current awareness services mentioned above
you should also note that many publishers offer journal issue or
table of contents alert services. Take a look at the web site of
your favorite journals to find out how to initiate these services.