13 research outputs found
An interactive two-dimensional approach to query aspects rewriting in systematic reviews. IMS unipd at CLEF eHealth task 2
International audienc
CLEF 2017 technologically assisted reviews in empirical medicine overview
Systematic reviews are a widely used method to provide an overview over the current scientific consensus, by bringing together multiple studies in a reliable, transparent way. The large and growing number of published studies, and their increasing rate of publication, makes the task of identifying all relevant studies in an unbiased way both complex and time consuming to the extent that jeopardizes the validity of their findings and the ability to inform policy and practice in a timely manner. The CLEF 2017 e-Health Lab Task 2 focuses on the efficient and effective ranking of studies during the abstract and title screening phase of conducting Diagnostic Test Accuracy systematic reviews. We constructed a benchmark collection of fifty such reviews and the corresponding relevant and irrelevant articles found by the original Boolean query. Fourteen teams participated in the task, submitting 68 automatic and semi-automatic runs, using information retrieval and machine learning algorithms over a variety of text representations, in a batch and iterative manner. This paper reports both the methodology used to construct the benchmark collection, and the results of the evaluation
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B!SON: A Tool for Open Access Journal Recommendation
Finding a suitable open access journal to publish scientific work is a complex task: Researchers have to navigate a constantly growing number of journals, institutional agreements with publishers, funders’ conditions and the risk of Predatory Publishers. To help with these challenges, we introduce a web-based journal recommendation system called B!SON. It is developed based on a systematic requirements analysis, built on open data, gives publisher-independent recommendations and works across domains. It suggests open access journals based on title, abstract and references provided by the user. The recommendation quality has been evaluated using a large test set of 10,000 articles. Development by two German scientific libraries ensures the longevity of the project
Introduction to Particle and Astroparticle Physics : Multimessenger Astronomy and its Particle Physics Foundations -2/E
This book introduces particle physics, astrophysics and cosmology starting from
experiment. It provides a unified view of these fields, which is needed to answer our
questions to the Universe–a unified view that has been lost somehow in recent years
due to increasing specialization.
This is the second edition of a book we published only three years ago, a book
which had a success beyond our expectations. We felt that the recent progress on
gravitational waves, gamma ray and neutrino astrophysics deserved a new edition
including all these new developments: multimessenger astronomy is now a reality.
In addition, the properties of the Higgs particle are much better known now than
three years ago. Thanks to this second edition we had the opportunity to fix some
bugs, to extend the material related to exercises, and to change in a more logical
form the order of some items. Last but not least, our editor encouraged us a lot to
write a second edition.
Particle physics has recently seen the incredible success of the so-called standard
model. A 50-year long search for the missing ingredient of the model, the Higgs
particle, has been concluded successfully, and some scientists claim that we are
close to the limit of the physics humans may know