Jump to content
Science Forums

Sharing: author feature in Microsoft Academic Search


Recommended Posts

Recently I ran across Microsoft Academic Search and found some interesting and valuable features. :)

Especially it has some useful tools that may help you in writing papers, choosing conferences or journals to submit articles,

getting to know scholar’s ranking and co-author relationship, etc..

 

This topic is limited to cover the author features only, okay let’s see…

 

Author ranking

In Microsoft Academic Search homepage, by clicking the Authors tab, popular authors overall/in certain domain show up.

Such guideline provides shortcut for us to update the most popular/active authors in a specific field.

 

We can also get a list of top-ranked authors among the 23 domains in Computer Science (seems they’re currently working more focused on this field).

It significantly improves my search efficiency by narrowing down the search results,

and helps me to find out the most influential researchers to whom I can refer in my interested domain.

It also has filters for last 10 years and last 5 years range, so that you can see who are the emerging influential scholars in recent years.

 

 

 

Author detail page & Visual Explorer

 

 

For me here’s the most exciting part. :hihi:

Each of the author is dedicated a profile page, and besides some basic information like research interests, homepage link and publication/citation trend,

Microsoft Academic Search has developed a tool called Visual Explorer, through which we can directly overview a scholar’s co-author network.

 

 

In the graph each node represents an author;

and the more publication one has, the bigger his/her node is. When clicking the “detail” button the co-author’s detail information shows up;

while clicking the linking line between two authors, we can see top papers written by them.

For me it’s amazing because following this network, I can easily reach a number of most relevant researchers and expand my knowledge in my interested domain.

 

That’s it and hope you find it helpful. 

Have fun with it, and any other tips, please share! :kuku:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well i would like a combination of the google scholar and the microsoft academic research, i like things about both, google scholar for example is not limited to subjects google put in there, and it gets me to a copy of the paper a lot faster in terms of clicks then the microsoft search thingy. On the other hand i like the relational visual piece for authors on the microsoft search, they need to make that happen for papers themselves, and a problem with that is that its all a silverlight, and that is buggy on OS X and moonlight is alpha at best on Linux, and who even uses Windows...? Plus i don't like Silverlight, it will die like HDDVD when HTML5 goes more main stream and gets finalized.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...