Focus on … Computer Science

Looking to get started on a project in computer science but don’t know where to begin your research?  Why not try these electronic resources available on findit.lu?

ACM Digital Library

The ACM Digital Library provides access to the full text of articles from journals, newsletters and conference proceedings published by ACM, the Association for Computing Machinery, the world’s largest educational and scientific computing society. It also has bibliographic citations from other major publishers in computing although not all of these will be available in full-text.

The ACM Digital Library can be searched in two different ways:

  1. Click here to connect to the ACM Digital Library and search using its interface. A useful video tutorial produced by the Cannavino Library in New York explains how to use the interface.
  2. Add ACM Digital Library to your list of preferred databases and search using the findit.lu portal.  Find out how by clicking here.

IEEE Xplore

IEEE Xplore is a gateway to the most vital information in the computing and engineering industry with access to journal articles, conference proceedings and standards helping you to advance in computer hardware and software innovation.  Here is just a sampling of IEEE content:

Journals

  • IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
  • IEEE Internet Computing Magazine
  • IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics
  • IEEE Design and Test of Computers Magazine
  • IEEE Intelligent Systems Magazine
  • IEEE Computer Architecture Letters

Standards

  • 1364-2006: IEEE Standard for Verilog Hardware Description Language
  • 1076-2008: IEEE Standard for VHDL Language Reference Manual
  • 830-1998: IEEE Recommended Practice for Software Requirements Specifications
  • 829-1998: IEEE Standard for Software Test Documentation

Conference Proceedings

  • IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy
  • IEEE Conference on Engineering of Complex Computer Systems
  • IEEE International Conference on Software Engineering
  • International Conference on Software Testing, Verification and Validation

IEEE Xplore can be accessed directly by clicking here or can be searched directly within the findit.lu portal. Find out how by clicking here.

Video tutorials on how to use IEEE Xplore are available on the IEEE website here.

Computers and Applied Sciences Complete

Computers and Applied Sciences Complete (CASC) covers the research and development spectrum of the computing and applied sciences disciplines. It contains collected knowledge on traditional engineering challenges & research, and is a resource for research concerning the business and social implications of new technology. CASC provides indexing and abstracts for nearly 2,200 academic journals, professional publications with full text available for more than 1,000 periodicals. Subject areas include the many engineering disciplines, computer theory & systems, new technologies, and social & professional context.

As for the ACM Digital Library and IEEE Xplore, CASC can be searched directly within its own interface on Ebsco (click here) or by adding it to your list of preferred databases and search using the findit.lu portal.  Find out how by clicking here.

Lecture Notes in Computer Science / Springer e-Books

The series, Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) from Springer, has established itself as a medium for the publication of new developments in computer science and information technology research and teaching – quickly, informally, and at a high level.

All volumes are published simultaneously in printed version and electronically, most of them in time for conferences, and selected titles in the print library have also been added to the digital library. The LNCS digital library holds over 35,000 papers written by over 50,000 individual scientists and professionals.

Also available is access to the full Springer e-book collection from 2005 to present day.

 

This has just been a sampling of the principal resources available in Computer Science.  Click here for access to the full list of resources.

 

 

To download this article as a PDF file, click here

New interface for Proquest databases

Proquest has launched their new interface.
Via findit.lu you have access to three bibliographic databases on the Proquest platform

ARTbibliographies Modern (ABM)  (1974 – current)
Modern and contemporary art – journal articles and books

International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)  (1951 – current)
Anthropology, economics, political science and sociology – journal articles, books, reviews

ProQuest Dissertations & Theses (A&I)  (1639 – current)
Multidisciplinary – dissertations & theses

(authentification required)

Focus on … Art and Artists

Looking for information regarding works of art and their artists?  Why not try these electronic resources available on findit.lu?

Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon / Artists of the World (AKL)

The database Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon Online / Artists of the World Online is the world’s most contemporary, reliable and extensive reference work on artists. It contains authoritative, up-to-date biographical information on more than 1 million artists.

The database offers biographies in full text from A to Z. The greatly extended scope is due to the incorporation of the renowned Thieme-Becker/Vollmer encyclopaedia, the Nürnberger Künstlerlexikon and the Lexikon der Künstlerinnen into the database. The number of full-text biographies doubled, as did the number of articles appearing not only in German but also in the original language.

The database now offers articles “online first”. This means that the articles are published online immediately, often long before they appear in print. Several thousand art history sources are evaluated on an ongoing basis for the database, and the content is continually updated and expanded.

ARTbibliographies Modern

ARTbibliographies Modern (ABM) provides full abstracts of journal articles, books, essays, exhibition catalogues, PhD dissertations, and exhibition reviews on all forms of modern and contemporary art, with more than 13,000 new entries being added each year. Entries date back as far as the late 1960s.

ABM is the premier source of information on modern and contemporary arts dating from the late 19th century onwards, including photography since its invention. It includes abstracts of English and foreign-language material on famous and lesser-known artists, movements, and trends. The coverage of ABM is wide-ranging and includes performance art and installation works, video art, computer and electronic art, body art, graffiti, artist’s books, theatre arts, conservation, crafts, ceramic and glass art, ethnic arts, graphic and museum design, fashion, and calligraphy, as well as traditional media including illustration, painting, printmaking, sculpture, and drawing.

Oxford Art Online

Oxford Art Online offers access to the most authoritative, inclusive, and easily searchable online art resources available today. Through a single gateway users can access—and simultaneously cross-search—an expanding range of Oxford’s acclaimed art reference works: Grove Art Online, the Benezit Dictionary of Artists, the Encyclopaedia of Aesthetics, The Oxford Companion to Western Art, and The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Art Terms, as well as many specially commissioned articles and bibliographies available exclusively online.

Oxford Art Online provides complete access to Grove Art Online, the foremost scholarly art encyclopaedia, covering both Western and non-Western art. The content of Grove Art encompasses all aspects of visual culture. It features articles about topics as varied as Fauvism and Frida Kahlo, bibliographies for further research, and thousands of searchable images made available through Oxford’s partnerships with museums, galleries, and other outstanding arts organizations. Grove Art is a living resource, with scholars and specialists from around the world continually reviewing and updating existing content and contributing new articles. In addition to the vast number of entries on the visual arts, Grove Art features a host of exceptional learning resources that organize the content for use in art and art history classrooms, making Grove Art an essential source for scholars and students alike.

JSTOR Arts & Sciences

JSTOR is a not–for–profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive of over one thousand academic journals and other scholarly content.

The 185 titles in the JSTOR Art & Art History Collection span the artistic cultures of many different countries as well as time periods.  A sampling of titles includes:

  • American Art Journal
  • Archives of Asian Art
  • Berliner Museen
  • Fine Arts Journal
  • Kunst des Orients
  • Modern Art

 

This has just been a sampling of the principal resources available on Art and Artists.  Click here for access to the full list of resources.

 

 

To download this article as a PDF file, click here.

Focus on … Psychology

Need to do some research in the psychology domain? Why not try these electronic resources available on findit.lu?

PsycARTICLES

PsycARTICLES is a database of full-text articles from journals published by the American Psychological Association, the APA Educational Publishing Foundation, the Canadian Psychological Association, and Hogrefe Publishing Group.

PsycARTICLES is recognized worldwide as a leading full text source for academic, research and practice literature in psychology and related disciplines. Featuring a continuously growing number of significant and highly regarded periodicals, PsycARTICLES is an unmatched resource for information in behavioural science.

PsycARTICLES can be accessed from within the National Library of Luxembourg, the University of Luxembourg, the Centre de Recherche Gabriel Lippmann, the Centre de Recherche Henri Tudor and the Centre de Recherche Santé.

PsycINFO

PsycINFO is an expansive abstracting and indexing database with more than 3 million records devoted to peer-reviewed literature in the behavioural sciences and mental health, making it an ideal discovery and linking tool for scholarly research in a host of disciplines.

PsycINFO covers the professional and academic literature in psychology and related disciplines, including medicine, psychiatry, nursing, sociology, pharmacology, physiology and linguistics.

PsycINFO can be accessed from within the National Library of Luxembourg, the University of Luxembourg, the Centre de Recherche Gabriel Lippmann, the Centre de Recherche Henri Tudor and the Centre de Recherche Santé.

Oxford University Press Journals

Oxford Journals is a division of Oxford University Press, which is a department of Oxford University. Oxford Journals publishes well over 230 academic and research journals covering a broad range of subject areas, two-thirds of which are published in collaboration with learned societies and other international organizations.

Their mission, as part of the University, is to bring the highest quality research to the widest possible audience.

The Oxford Journals Collection can be accessed directly by clicking here or can be searched directly within the findit.lu portal. Find out how by clicking here.

Francis

The FRANCIS database is created by the Institut de l’Information Scientifique et Technique of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (INIST-CNRS) in Vandoeuvre-les-Nancy, France and is an invaluable resource for research libraries. FRANCIS is a multilingual, multidisciplinary database covering the humanities and social sciences. Its broad subject areas and international scope make it an ideal stand-alone social science database, as well as a suitable complement for more specialised databases. FRANCIS is strong in areas such as archaeology, geography, linguistics, philosophy, psychology, religion, and sociology. The database contains approximately 2 million records, with abstracts in French or English, and descriptors in both languages, and includes coverage of journals, books, conference papers and other documents.

As for the Oxford Journals Collection, FRANCIS can be accessed directly by clicking here or can be searched within the findit.lu portal. Find out how by clicking here.

 

This has just been a sampling of the principal resources available in Psychology.  Click here for access to the full list of resources.

 

 

To download this article as a PDF file, click here.

How to set up e-TOC alerts for the Ovid Platform

Creating electronic Table of Contents (e-TOC) alerts for Ovid Journals is now easy and straight forward with the new OvidSP Interface.

1. Connect to the Ovid platform

Navigate to www.findit.lu and search for databases containing the word Ovid, or click here.

Then, click on one of the entries to get into the Ovid platform.  I recommend using PsycArticles.

2.  Choose your journal

Once in the Ovid platform, click on the Journals tab …

and then click on the title of your desired journal. You can use the search box and the filters on the left-hand side to find the journal which interests you.  In my example, I have chosen “European Psychologist”.

3. Set-up your eTOC alert

Once you are at the main page of your desired journal, click on the Email link on the top right-hand side of the journal title section.

A new page will open requesting your e-mail address and whether or not you would like the emails in text or html format.

Enter your details and click on the “Subscribe” button.  You will receive a confirmation screen indicating the journal name, your e-mail address and the subscription type.

You can also manage your subscriptions by going directly to eTOCs Subscription Management page.  In this case, don’t forget to click on the “Update” button to save your changes.

 

For other tips and tricks on using the Ovid Platform, check out their Training and Documentation page which includes web-based instructor-led training as well as tutorials you can do on your own.

Emerald : Research in the News

Emerald Publishing has launched “Research in the News”, a free on-line resource which links research published in scholarly journals to current global events. Every month, three articles or book chapters are selected from the latest Emerald content to highlight new ground breaking research.

The articles are freely accessible for one month. November’s selection includes: “IBM, McDonald’s and Google reinvent themselves”.

Check it out each month at http://www.emeraldinsight.com/rin/index.htm.

 

What’s New in the The Palgrave Dictionary of Economics ?

The latest update of the Palgrave Dictionary of Economics consists of the following articles:

European Monetary Union
Paul De Grauwe
This article explores the development of Economic and Monetary Union in Europe from the Second World War through to the end of 2010.This article discusses its successes and failures, analyzes the fragility of EMU, and identifies two sources of this fragility. Finally, it discusses governance issues and the nature of the political institutions that will be necessary to sustain the European Monetary Union.

European Union Budget
Mojmir Mrak
This article starts by presenting the concept and evolution of the EU budget. It then discusses the principles and procedures governing its adoption and implementation, presenting the key features of the expenditure and revenue sides of the EU budget.

European Union (EU) Trade Policy
Stephen Woolcock
This contribution provides an overview of the evolution of EU policy, a summary of the EU’s positions on key issues in international trade and a summary of the decision-making procedures in EU external trade policy after the adoption of the Lisbon Treaty.

Dale Mortensen
Rasmus Lentz
This article studies Dale T. Mortensen (born 1939) who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Economics in 2010 jointly with Peter A. Diamond and Christopher A. Pissarides for his work on the analysis of markets with search frictions. An empirically motivated theoretical economist, Mortensen has made a tremendous contribution to the field of labour economics.

Christopher Pissarides
Richard Jackman
This articles studies Professor Christopher Pissarides, who was awarded the 2010 Nobel Prize in Economics jointly with Peter Diamond and Dale Mortensen ‘for their analysis of markets with search frictions’.

Two-part tariffs
Nikolaos Vettas
This article analyses the two-part tariff, a pricing scheme according to which the buyer pays to the seller a fixed fee and a constant charge for each unit purchased.

For these and other articles, click on The Palgrave Dictionary of Economics on findit.lu.

It’s not just about books: Film and Cinema at the Walferdange Book Days

The 17th edition of the Walferdange Book Days takes place this coming weekend, the 19th and 20th of November, in Walferdange at the Centre Prince Henri and the surrounding halls.  This year’s theme is “Film and Cinema”.  To get everyone in the mood, here are a selection of resources available on www.findit.lu:
 

Film Index International

Want to know what movies Luc Feit has directed? How about what movies René Deltgen has acted in? Check them out in Film Index International:

 

Naxos Music Library

Feel like listening to some music from your favourite films?  Take a look at the Film and TV section of Naxos Music Library where you can find things like the music from Star Wars and other Sci-Fi classics.
 

Munzinger Film

Want to find a film to watch but you prefer to check out the reviews first?  Read the reviews from Film Dienst online with Munzinger Film such as The Girl with the Pearl Earring/Das Mädchen mit dem Perlenohrring.
Note: Munzinger Film is in German.
 
Sophia Loren

Credo Reference

Have to win that film quiz night at all costs?  Check out the Chambers Film Factfinder on Credo Reference where you can find out who won the Academy Award for Best Actress in 1961.

 

 

American Film Institute Catalog

Want to rent a movie but don’t know what to pick?  Take a look at AFI’s Top Ten Films 2000-2010.

 

There is tonnes more available on the findit.lu portal! To see all resources linked to the Arts, click here.

New name “findit.lu” and email subscriptions to blog

We have changed our name to findit.lu!

The consortium and IT teams of the national library have been busy changing all systems to the new name and today we finished the switch.

The old addresses of the portal “www.portail.bnu.lu” and “www.portail.bnl.lu” have been changed to “findit.lu” (the longer “www.findit.lu” works also)

The old address of this blog “www.consortium.lu” has been changed to ”blog.findit.lu” (the longer “www.blog.findit.lu” works also).

There is an additional way to stay up to date:  Besides the usual RSS feed, you can also subscribe to this blog by email now, please add your email in the right column “Subscribe to blog by email”. We use Google’s feedburner system.

The transition to the new name should be completely transparent for all users and not lead to any disruptions. But… by 2013, the old addresses will stop working, so please make sure your bookmarks and feed subscriptions are changed to avoid any surprises, for details please check the Help page.

For details about the consortium, check the About findit.lu page.