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News from JURN

Category Archives: My general observations

JURN group test: what is history carr

05 Saturday Apr 2014

Posted by futurilla in Academic search, JURN metrics, My general observations

≈ Leave a comment

Spurred by my recent musings on Future Studies, software bots, and ‘predictive intelligence‘, I’ve done a quick survey test by running JURN against other search tools. For the test I picked this search for E. H. Carr’s famous What is History?…

what is history carr

… intending to evaluate the ability to deliver semantic-deductive quasi-predictive search results based only on a very fuzzy ‘possible print title’ + ‘a hint at a possible surname’. A hat-tip to Musings About Librarianship (Aaron Tay) for this search idea.

JURN group test: what is history carr
 
April 2014, using unmodified Internet Explorer 11, not signed in to Google.
Searching for free full-text scholarly articles, theses or book chapters related to historian E. H. Carr. Clicked through on results, and evaluated.
Google Scholar 0 Examined first 50 results. Google Books links were not counted.
DOAJ 0 Used ‘Article’ search. The single result was a false positive for “Carr, L. G.”
JournalTOCS 0 Only 13 results
Ingenta Connect 0 Only 13 results
NDLtd 0 Only 7 results. Appears more generally to have a great many “404 Not Found” links.
Journal Seek 0 “No results” message was surrounded by Google ads.
Mendeley 0 Search ‘Articles’ only, then filtered for Open Access articles only. Mendeley ignored ‘Carr’ totally, and appeared to search only on ‘What’ + ‘History’. Examined first 20 results, 19 of which were science.
OATD 0 Looked at first 30 results. The No.1 result Politics at Its Demise: E. H. Carr, 1931-1939 looked promising, but this thesis proved to have been deleted or moved. All other results were way off mark.
Microsoft Academic 0 Examined first 50 results. Lots of paywall articles, on or from just about every Carr except A. H. Carr!
Digital Commons Network 0 Searched Arts and Humanities portal, then filtered results by ‘History’ facet. Appears to use the same system as OALib, giving many false positives for caricature, carrying and career etc.
CORE 1 Search not filtered. Examined first 50 results. Only the first topmost result was good.
OAlib 1 Examined first twenty results. Many false positives for caricature, carrying and carry. Switching to ‘Author’ search failed to surface A. H. Carr in first 10 results.
BASE 1 Searched ‘Verbatim’ on ‘Entire Document’. Examined first 50 results. Several promising early results proved to be repository records with no link to full-text. From the second page onward there were false positives for history + what and perhaps for carried.
OPENDoar 8 Examined first 50 results. Several valid results arose from approaches to understanding Carr in relation to Trotsky, in old leftist journals.
Google Search 9 Forced verbatim. Examined first 50 results. Didn’t count erudite blog posts (of which there were about a dozen, inc. a couple with footnote references) or Google Books links. Five of the nine counted results were sorry-looking unofficial scans of the famous work itself.
JURN 11   Checked first 50 results. First page of results has seven relevant results. Later false positives were nearly all for other academics named Carr.

CONCLUSION: So JURN is certainly not a magic wand for this tricky search, but it is performing much better than other search tools and vastly better than Google Scholar or the DOAJ. The results do especially well in terms of the accuracy of the first seven results, but thereafter they struggle (yet do at least focus mostly on people named Carr). Across all the search tools it was surprising to see so little cross-talk in the results from academic articles and chapters on Star Carr, a very famous archeological site in the UK. I noticed no cross-talk at all from the history of cars (vehicles) despite my lack of capitalisation on carr.

DATA: The relevant results list from JURN is…

1. Alun Munslow, Book review of E.H. Carr: A Critical Appraisal, History in Focus, Autumn 2001 (Institute of Historical Research at the University of London)

2. Alun Munslow, Review of What is History?, Reviews in History, November 1997.

3. Unofficial scan from What is History?.

4. Richard J. Evans, The Two Faces of E.H. Carr, History in Focus, Autumn 2001 (Institute of Historical Research at the University of London) (Based on his introduction to a new Palgrave edition of What is History?)

5. Table of Contents for the special What is History? edition of History in Focus, Autumn 2001 (Institute of Historical Research at the University of London)

6. Micheal Cox, Will the real E. H. Carr please stand up?, International Affairs, 75, 3 (1999). (Review of The Vices of Integrity, E. H. Carr, 1892-1982).

7. David Freeland Duke, Edward Hallett Carr: Historical Realism and the Liberal Tradition, Past Imperfect, Vol.2, 1993.

~

14. De Lamar Jensen, What is History? Edward Hallett Carr, Brigham Young University Studies, Vol.5, No.2 (1964).

~

26. Philosophy of History article in Internet Encyclopedia of Philisophy. (Mentions Carr in passing)

27. Ann Talbot, Chance and necessity in history : E.H. Carr and Leon Trotsky compared, Historical Social Research, 34 (2009).

28. Political Realism in International Relations article in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. (Carr has his own section in this, “E. H. Carr’s Challenge of Utopian Idealism”)


Why no Open J-Gate in this group test? It died years ago. Scirus also died more recently, at the start of 2014. Google News was tested, but for this search it proved to be useless at this moment in time — although it can sometimes be surprisingly useful.

Addition to the JURN FAQ

30 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by futurilla in My general observations

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Who is JURN for?

* independent scholars and researchers
* students and lecturers in developing nations
* unemployed or retired lecturers
* recent university graduates
* knowledge professionals outside of academia
* business leaders
* public policy makers and planners
* journalists and bloggers
* public intellectuals and ‘think tanks’
* evidence-based campaigners and activists
* amateur historians
* teachers of students aged under 18
* advanced and ambitious students, age 14-18
* home schoolers and grassroots educators

* adjunct or associate university lecturers, seeking a substitute for lost paywall access during the long summer holiday
* university lecturers and students, seeking a straightforward search tool for full-text open access content

Not written by a bot

25 Tuesday Mar 2014

Posted by futurilla in My general observations, New media journal articles, Spotted in the news

≈ 3 Comments

The academic world recently learned that bots can write automated gibberish and — with a little help from their fleshy minions — can have it published in mainstream peer-reviewed scientific publications. But are we prepared for what follows from the moment when bots can reliably produce writing that makes real sense and which is useful and timely enough for use in major newspapers? It’s happening already. The finances of newspapers are such that a wave of robo-journalism seems inevitable, once we have a few more advances in semantics and automated basic fact-checking. Given the current dismal state of newspaper science reporting such new-fangled robo-news may even be slightly better than what we have now.

It follows that journal editors and publishers may soon need to add a new clause to their author guidelines, such as: “articles must be fully written by humans”. Not for fear of gibberish faux-papers, but rather because bots will be able to add sensible summaries and otherwise usefully aid in the writing of a research paper. Or we may need to develop an agreed form of simple presentation to flag up: [bot]this section of the text was written by bots[/bot] and to embed links to the bot’s sources.

Incidentally, I’ve also often thought that the humourous LOLcat language would form a pleasing basis for identifying messages-sent-to-humans by objects embedded in The Internet of Things, clearly marking their simpler forms of communications to us as being: ‘not kreated by th humanz’. We already have the LOLcat translation systems available.

JURN code overhaul

22 Saturday Mar 2014

Posted by futurilla in JURN metrics, My general observations

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I’ve overhauled the code that’s driving search and display for JURN, plugging in newer v2 CSE code and and wrangling in some new CSS. JURN should now be a little faster than before, while giving Google a little less server overhead.

jurn-march2014

Changes, as seen above:

1. A spiffy new graphical “Search” button to click. Next to it is an X to click, which clears the search and starts over again.

2. Removed the confusing and misleading “Found 565,000 hits in 0.4 seconds…” notifications. Google was never providing JURN’s users that many hits anyway. It was just that valuable computational time was not being spent finessing down the main index numbers for the benefit of curated Custom Search users.

3. The search results page links — found at the very foot of the search results as 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 — are now aligned left.

4. The faint dotted underline on links is now carried over onto the actual results links. Last week Google started taking underlines off search results altogether, though it was mostly tech-heads who spotted it being tested. For now, links are still underlined on the JURN results. But if underlines do get taken off Google links in the near future then I’d hope my faint dotted underline will remain to soften the blow for traditionalists.

5. A millisecond delay as the search-box loads, on first visiting the page.

Derivative stuff

16 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by futurilla in My general observations

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Ross Mounce discusses the problems of blogging snippets from CC BY-NC-ND articles which forbid derivative works. Here’s a live example from Europeana. They couldn’t display a title-page preview, even if they wanted to, due to the no-derivatives licence…

europe

Perhaps we need a little ‘show only a user-defined area’ PDF embedding widget like the excellent Snippage. Snippage lets you display a user-defined frameless fragment of any Web page on your Windows desktop, and have it refresh at regular intervals. Here it is in action on my desktop…

snippage

This is the BBC 5-day UK weather, snipped down to a live two-day tile. A version of Snippage for blog embedding of PDFs would of course embed the whole PDF (a bit clunky, but doesn’t violate the licence…), yet would show only a user-defined area of a specific page. Firefox’s open HTML5 render engine for PDFs might be the underlying tech to make it work.

Or we could just use a screenshot and plead ‘fair use’.

Crazy English Teachers

04 Tuesday Mar 2014

Posted by futurilla in My general observations

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Thanks to the (new?) English-translated version of the China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI) journal search service, I’m fascinated to know there’s a journal in China called Crazy English Teachers 🙂

crazy

Crowdfunding Project Finder updated

25 Tuesday Feb 2014

Posted by futurilla in My general observations

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My Project Finder search-engine has updated. It’s a very simple tool for finding crowdfunding projects from across the reputable crowdfunding services. Six dead or very moribund services weeded out, two new ones added.

JURN is five years old

03 Monday Feb 2014

Posted by futurilla in My general observations, New titles added to JURN

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JURN is now five years old, having launched in early alpha form with just 951 titles on 3rd February 2009. The current headline total of 4,690 titles works out at an average growth of around 750 titles per year, although in the calendar year of 2013 this had slowed to indexing around 350 new English language titles. However, the 350 figure was from my simple tallying from the “new titles added” blog posts — and this blog doesn’t report additions of non-English titles.

Actually, JURN’s headline total is probably an undercounting, since JURN can index nearly all French and Spanish language journals with a few “catch all” URLs for services such as Redalyc, Raco, Dialnet, and Revues. Also JStage in Japan. As their totals in humanities and arts steadily mount up, uncounted by me, so the total number of journals indexed by JURN automatically grows. The same is true of JURN’s use of single wildcard URLs that index all articles on a university’s dedicated open journal system (such as: http://ojs.library.dal.ca/*/article/). These two factors mean that, if I were able to do a complete recount from scratch, the real headline figure for JURN would probably be well over 5,000 arts and humanities titles.

The centralised nature of science and biomedical meant that thousands of open journals in these areas could be added with little effort, and so they were experimentally included in JURN in late 2013 — although their numbers were not added to the headline total of journals indexed.

The Directory of over 3,000 titles published in English continues to grow.

JURN continues to be robustly maintained and repaired.

Overall usage of JURN continues to grow, although it would be nice to have a publicity professional or two to help more people become aware of the service.

Group test: free search for free full-text journal articles and chapters

22 Sunday Dec 2013

Posted by futurilla in My general observations

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Time for another group test of search tools offering various forms of free full-text access. The search term I used for the test was: “frontier thesis”, an influential idea which has been well chewed over and widely used, since being presented in Turner’s famous “The Significance of the Frontier in American History” (1893). The chosen test may favour JURN slightly, since JURN is perhaps overly strong in the field of history. On the other hand, and as a counterweight, this test also favours general academic search-engines able to cover fields such as geography, politics, and economics.

Results from looking for relevant full-text articles or book chapters, not theses or dissertations, in:

Zero | Google Scholar (examined the first four pages of results, and was not counting links to JSTOR, or Muse or pages via Google Books).

Zero | DOAJ (searched at the article level)

Zero | JournalTOCS (searched ‘articles by keywords’)

Zero | IngentaConnect (had only two results)

Zero | JournalSeek

Zero | AOlib

Zero | Rock Your Paper

1 | Mendeley (searched papers) (zero results, but then tried on: frontier thesis turner and examined first 10 results)

1 | Scirus

1 | Microsoft Academic Search (examined the first two pages of results)

1 | Journal Database (had only four results. Site seems to be basically a reformatted rip of the old static DOAJ, with most of the humanities missing?)

5 | OpenDOAR (examined the first 20 results)

10 | BASE (searched verbatim, no “”) (BASE is now able to filter results by journal articles — examined the first 20 of these filtered results)

20 | JURN (examined the first 20 results)


Notes:

* Although not included in the above list, a search of Google News once again gave a small number of interesting and relevant results from serious-minded sources: A Daily Telegraph review of the popular biographical survey book The Men Who United the States; a long free excerpt from the new book “The Petropolis of Tomorrow” (on cities which form around resource extraction) from Archinect journal; and a New York Times obituary, “Andro Linklater, Who Re-Examined American Frontierism, Dies at 68”.

* It’s excellent to see that the repository search engine BASE is now able to filter results by ‘type: journal articles’, and is even able to further filter by ‘known open access’ (although the latter currently works very poorly). So far as I know BASE is the first repository search tool to add this useful feature.

* It’s interesting to note that, unlike other academic search tools, JURN‘s search results don’t collapse into irrelevance by the second or third page of results (so long as the initial search was well formed).

* Why no Open J-Gate or FindArticles.com in the above list? They died a couple of years ago. It’s also been announced that Scirus is being abandoned in January 2014.

On the falsification of educational outcome statistics

08 Sunday Dec 2013

Posted by futurilla in My general observations, Spotted in the news

≈ 2 Comments

The latest EconTalk podcast is a fascinating long interview with Lant Pritchett (Professor of the Practice of International Development, Harvard). The first third of the programme discusses the widespread and systemic falsification of educational outcome statistics for government-run education in the developing world, as detailed in Pritchett’s new book The Rebirth of Education. I might also add that in some parts of the declining world, such as Russia, the educational and other statistics are also suspected to be diverging from reality. Nor is even the UK immune, as we now have rampant grade-inflation of degree classifications at the undergraduate level.

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