Sciweavers

DIS
2005
Springer

The Arrowsmith Project: 2005 Status Report

13 years 9 months ago
The Arrowsmith Project: 2005 Status Report
In the 1980s, Don Swanson proposed the concept of “undiscovered public knowledge,” and published several examples in which two disparate literatures (i.e., sets of articles having no papers in common, no authors in common, and few cross-citations) nevertheless held complementary pieces of knowledge that, when brought together, made compelling and testable predictions about potential therapies for human disorders. In the 1990s, Don and I published more predictions together and created a computer-assisted search strategy (“Arrowsmith”). At first, the so-called one-node search was emphasized, in which one begins with a single literature (e.g., that dealing with a disease) and searches for a second unknown literature having complementary knowledge (e.g. that dealing with potential therapies). However, we soon realized that the two-node search is better aligned to the information practices of most biomedical investigators: in this case, the user chooses two literatures and then seek...
Neil R. Smalheiser
Added 27 Jun 2010
Updated 27 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2005
Where DIS
Authors Neil R. Smalheiser
Comments (0)