Literature DB >> 2403828

Medical literature as a potential source of new knowledge.

D R Swanson1.   

Abstract

Specialized biomedical literatures have been found that are implicitly linked by arguments that they respectively contain, but which nonetheless do not cite or refer to each other. The combined arguments lead to new inferences and conclusions that cannot be drawn from the separate literatures. One such analysis identified one set of articles showing that dietary fish oils lead to certain blood and vascular changes, and a second set containing evidence that similar changes might benefit patients with Raynaud's syndrome. Yet these two literatures had no articles in common and had never before been cited together; neither literature mentioned the other or suggested that dietary fish oil might benefit Raynaud patients. Two years after publication of that analysis, the first clinical trial demonstrating such a beneficial effect was reported independently by others. A second example of literature synthesis, based on eleven indirect connections, led to an inference that magnesium deficiency might be a causal factor in migraine headache. A third example calls attention to implicit connections between arginine intake and blood levels of somatomedins, a potentially fruitful but neglected area of research with implications for the decline with age of thymic function and protein synthesis. A model and an online search strategy to aid in identifying other logically related noninteractive literatures is described. Such structures are probably not rare and may provide the foundation for a literature-based approach to scientific discovery.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  1990        PMID: 2403828      PMCID: PMC225324     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bull Med Libr Assoc        ISSN: 0025-7338


  9 in total

1.  Citation indexes for science; a new dimension in documentation through association of ideas.

Authors:  E GARFIELD
Journal:  Science       Date:  1955-07-15       Impact factor: 47.728

2.  Searching natural language text by computer. Machine indexing and text searching offer an approach to the basic problems of library automation.

Authors:  D R SWANSON
Journal:  Science       Date:  1960-10-21       Impact factor: 47.728

3.  Online search for logically-related noninteractive medical literatures: a systematic trial-and-error strategy.

Authors:  D R Swanson
Journal:  J Am Soc Inf Sci       Date:  1989-09

4.  A second example of mutually isolated medical literatures related by implicit, unnoticed connections.

Authors:  D R Swanson
Journal:  J Am Soc Inf Sci       Date:  1989-11

Review 5.  Migraine and magnesium: eleven neglected connections.

Authors:  D R Swanson
Journal:  Perspect Biol Med       Date:  1988       Impact factor: 1.416

6.  Fish oil, Raynaud's syndrome, and undiscovered public knowledge.

Authors:  D R Swanson
Journal:  Perspect Biol Med       Date:  1986       Impact factor: 1.416

7.  Automatic text analysis.

Authors:  G Salton
Journal:  Science       Date:  1970-04-17       Impact factor: 47.728

Review 8.  Calcium antagonist properties of magnesium: implications for antimigraine actions.

Authors:  B M Altura
Journal:  Magnesium       Date:  1985

9.  Low brain magnesium in migraine.

Authors:  N M Ramadan; H Halvorson; A Vande-Linde; S R Levine; J A Helpern; K M Welch
Journal:  Headache       Date:  1989-07       Impact factor: 5.887

  9 in total
  47 in total

1.  Meta-analysis: a tool for medical and scientific discoveries.

Authors:  C L Schell; R J Rathe
Journal:  Bull Med Libr Assoc       Date:  1992-07

Review 2.  Chinese medicine pattern diagnosis could lead to innovation in medical sciences.

Authors:  Ai-Ping Lu; Ke-Ji Chen
Journal:  Chin J Integr Med       Date:  2011-11-06       Impact factor: 1.978

3.  Mining connections between chemicals, proteins, and diseases extracted from Medline annotations.

Authors:  Nancy C Baker; Bradley M Hemminger
Journal:  J Biomed Inform       Date:  2010-03-27       Impact factor: 6.317

4.  Using co-occurrence network structure to extract synonymous gene and protein names from MEDLINE abstracts.

Authors:  A M Cohen; W R Hersh; C Dubay; K Spackman
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2005-04-22       Impact factor: 3.169

5.  Chemocentric informatics approach to drug discovery: identification and experimental validation of selective estrogen receptor modulators as ligands of 5-hydroxytryptamine-6 receptors and as potential cognition enhancers.

Authors:  Rima Hajjo; Vincent Setola; Bryan L Roth; Alexander Tropsha
Journal:  J Med Chem       Date:  2012-06-11       Impact factor: 7.446

6.  Using semantic and structural properties of the Unified Medical Language System to discover potential terminological relationships.

Authors:  Chintan O Patel; James J Cimino
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2009-03-04       Impact factor: 4.497

7.  Automatic Indexing of Documents from Journal Descriptors: A Preliminary Investigation.

Authors:  Susanne M Humphrey
Journal:  J Am Soc Inf Sci       Date:  1999

8.  Classification-by-Analogy: Using Vector Representations of Implicit Relationships to Identify Plausibly Causal Drug/Side-effect Relationships.

Authors:  Justin Mower; Devika Subramanian; Ning Shang; Trevor Cohen
Journal:  AMIA Annu Symp Proc       Date:  2017-02-10

9.  Discovering discovery patterns with Predication-based Semantic Indexing.

Authors:  Trevor Cohen; Dominic Widdows; Roger W Schvaneveldt; Peter Davies; Thomas C Rindflesch
Journal:  J Biomed Inform       Date:  2012-07-26       Impact factor: 6.317

10.  Novel protein-protein interactions inferred from literature context.

Authors:  Herman H H B M van Haagen; Peter A C 't Hoen; Alessandro Botelho Bovo; Antoine de Morrée; Erik M van Mulligen; Christine Chichester; Jan A Kors; Johan T den Dunnen; Gert-Jan B van Ommen; Silvère M van der Maarel; Vinícius Medina Kern; Barend Mons; Martijn J Schuemie
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2009-11-18       Impact factor: 3.240

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.