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Archive for CSEs

Yottalook Radiology Search

Yottalook is a free radiology-centric search engine based on Google’s indexing technology with proprietary relevance algorithm by iVirtuoso. Currently, Yottalook Images and Yottalook References search engines are available for use. Yottalook Image has specially been designed to search radiology images from various peer-reviewed online sources and currently has access to over 100,000 images. Yottalook References has been designed to search online radiology sources only. Try various refinement options to narrow your search requests even further.

Appears to be a great application of the Custom Search Engine tools from Google Co-Op.

Please note: I can’t get it to work with Firefox, but it works fine in IE7. YMMV.

[Via]

Consumer Health CSE at AHSLC Presentation

I learned via David’s Random Stuff that the Consumer Health and Patient Education CSE I made was mentioned by Tim Daniels, Learning Commons Coordinator at Georgia State University when he gave a presentation last Friday at a meeting of the Atlanta Health Science Library Consortium called “Exploring Blogs, Wikis, and other social software applications.”

Neat! The fact that a tool built in less then 60 minutes has been getting attention from medical librarians sort of tickles me. It speaks well, I think, for how easy-to-use and potentially useful the Google Custom Search Engine tools can be.

Tim also mentioned my friend Frankie Dolan’s MedWorm, which is great because it absolutely deserves the attention.

Journal of EAHIL: Web 2.0 (and International MedLib Blogging)

Over at the European Medical Librarians blog, Oliver Obst has posted a link to a recent issue of the Journal of EAHIL (European Association for Health Information and Libraries) in which he has published his new column, titled “Web 2.0″ (see page 50 of this PDF).

Oliver starts with an overview of MedLib blogs,including charts of some North American and European blogs, and talks about EUROMEDLIB. Oliver writes:

…five bloggers from Sweden, Netherlands, France, and Germany decided to take this idea one step further and build a cross-border blog with a real European scope, called EUROMEDLIB – Items of Interests for everyone working in an European Medical Library. As it is stated in the mission of EUROMEDLIB, There is a strong desire for networking among European medical librarians. This blog serves as a starting point for what is at the heart of EAHIL. You will find EUROMEDLIB at http://euromedlib.blogspot.com/. Every European Medical Librarian is invited to participate, either by writing or commenting posts.

I really admire the enthusiasm that Oliver, Dymphie, Benoit, Guus, and Lars demonstrate for community-building. Oliver and Dymphie both added the MedLib Blog badge to their blog sidebars, and Dymphie used the Google Customized Search Engine tools to make a CSE just for searching MedLib Blogs.

Bridging the language gap

I subscribe to the feeds of MedLib blogs in languages other than english and use machine translation to work out what they say if a post looks interesting, but it might encourage more anglophones to read these if each included translation buttons in their sidebars. Babelfish makes this pretty easy, just copy and paste the code here into your page. (I know other web-based machine translation services offer similar tools- anyone have a favorite?)

I have added this to my own sidebar. The machine translation is far from perfect, but it is enough generally to allow me to understand what is being written about in German or Dutch, so I am hopeful that it will function as well for readers whose English proficiency is similar to my proficiency in German or Dutch.

Additional Links to our European MedLib Blogger friends:

Update: Consumer Health & Patient Education Custom Search Engine (CSE)

Update, 12/2/2006: Further information on the CSE and the Second Life Library Search HUD at InfoIsland.

_______________________________

Guus van den Brekel (a.k.a. Namro Orman) made my day today.

He’s going to try to make the CSE that I made available from the Second Life Librares in the Library Search HUD (HeadsUp Display).

Neat!

Guus, don’t worry about the delayed guest post. Doing the work is more important than writing about it, but you gotta’ write about it eventually. :)

Creating Advanced Google Custom Search Engines

If you’re interested in Google CSEs, you’ll want to check out this post from Google Blogoscoped by John Biundo and Eric Enge of Stone Temple Consulting. Enge is the creator of the Custom Search Guide.

Note that this is for the more advanced features of Google CSEs. The authors state clearly:

This article is not intended as a gentle introduction to CSEs. For that, you may want to start with this overview of Google Custom Search Engines or this article showing how to build a good Custom Search Engine.

I like learning materials that teach by examples, so I was pleased to see that the article walks one through the steps by building an example CSE to search sites for wine aficionados.

Consumer Health Information Search Engine

An RN came by our library the other day looking for a particular piece of patient education information, and I found it very time consuming to pull up each appropriate site and search it. So time-consuming, in fact, that I was late for my appointment to meet with our hospital’s Director of Information Services. Can’t have that.

It didn’t occur to me until this evening, though, that a Google Custom Search Engine might be very useful in enabling the user to simultaneously search more than a hundred Consumer Healthcare/Patient Education sites recommended by the NLM and/or CAPHIS.

So I slapped one together that searches 134 URLs, and you can try it out here.

It is interesting to compare the search results of this CSE to those of Google Health Co-op. Here are the results of searching the CSE for “Ulcerative Colitis,” and here are the results of searching the Google Health Co-op for “Ulcerative Colitis” refined for Patient Information. The major difference, I think, is in what the CSE excludes. If we use the same search string in “regular” Google without the refinement for Patient Information, the fifth search result is from Wikipedia- far from authoritative.

Now I need to learn to use Google Marker and Refinement Labels in order to make it more powerful, but this seems like a good start.

Still, I really would like to be able to sort search results by something other than Google’s PageRank.

(Also, I need to think through the potential value of making this tool available to all clinical users at our hospital, and work out the best way to go about making it work for even those users who have restricted web access.)

Your opinions and suggestions would be sincerely appreciated- let me know what you think!

Posts on davidrothman.net about the Google Custom Search Engine service:

CSE Directories: Popping up all over

Honestly, I’ll shut up about Google CSEs soon.

Check out this comment I received, though:

CSE Links Directory Says:
November 2nd, 2006 at 4:31 am

If you are interested in publicising your CSE you may want to be an early bird submitter at our CSE links directory at http://www.cselinks.com/ – your submission will include as long a description of your CSE as you wish together with relevant keyword lists, both of which you will be entitled to edit and keep up to date if you register as an Editor. You can also add new CSEs as you build them. All Editors will also have permission to rate and comment on other CSEs thereby constantly improving the overall quality of our visitors’ experience. The site will officially go live on Thursday.

Velly intellestink, no? At my last count, this is the third service I’ve seen seeking to by the go-to directory for finding a Google CSE for your subject of choice. The other two I’ve noticed are CustomSearchGuide.com (which Google seems to have partnered with…?) and Lurpo.com (I think I first heard of both from Google Blogoscoped).



Prediction: I’m now counting down the minutes until someone creates a CSE for searching multiple CSE Directories…

Previous posts about Google CSEs:

Search all the MedLib Blogs (Really this time)

Dymphie rocks.

As promised in a comment on an earlier post, the rest of the MedLib blogs have been added to Dymphie’s Google Custom Search Engine for the Masterlist of MedLib Blogs. I’ve added a link on the page at LISwiki to Dymphie’s search engine, so you can now search all the MedLib blogs listed all at once.

Click here if you’d like to jump straight to the MedLib Blogs CSE at its home, or use the form below to try it out:


(Could someone with more MediaWiki experience let me know if it is possible in MediaWiki to add this snippet of javascript so the search could actually be added to the page at LISwiki?)

Dymphie’s CSE is neat and useful, but I’m still annoyed by the absence of any sorting features in the search results, and I think Steven Cohen is right that the CSE search results would be a lot better if they could be outputted as RSS. I suspect that this won’t ever actually happen, but that’s a topic for another (future) post.

MedLib Blog Search (via Google CSE)

Dymphie over at biomedbiblog used the Google CSE to make a search engine of the blogs in the Masterlist of MedLib blogs.

Give it a try!

Previous posts on the Masterlist of MedLib Blogs

Uses of Google Custom Search Engine (including Librarianship Feed Finder)

Update: THIS rocks. Garrett Hungerford used Google’s CSE to make LISZEN, a Library & Information Science Search Engine.
——————————

(My “Librarianship Feed Finder” CSE is at the bottom of this post if you want to skip down to it.)

So when Google announced its new custom search engine tool, I pretty much ignored it. After all, Rollyo has been offering a similar service for a good long while now. Eurekster’s Swicki does something similar, and Google’s direct competitor, Yahoo, has had the Yahoo! Search Builder since August.

However, recent readings suggest this may have been a hasty judgement, as creative uses of googles new tool pop up all around.

Last week, I posted about Give Me Back My Google, a tool that executes your google search and excludes link-spam sites. Well, the Google Customized Search Engine tool can also exclude domains and accept wildcard characters, so someone has used it to create Putch Search, which has some advantages over Give Me Back My Google. The most important advantage is that anyone can join the collobrative and add spammy sites to be excluded.

Putch Search

Another interesting use is being explored by librarian Bill Drew (of blogs Baby Boomer Librarian and Wireless Libraries). Bill has put together a custom search engine for information WLANs and Libraries.

Of course, the application most interesting to me so far is the Google Medicine portal tha Dean Giustini made. Dean has offered a list of most of the sites searched by his engine (20 of 27), and shows us the results of the same search (”common cold” AND “vitamin C”) in Google, Google Scholar, and his new Google Medicine.

For other interesting applications of Google CSE, check out eWeek’s slide show of Google Custom Search Engines.

But I think consideration of the bigger picture is called for here. Google has more to gain from this than just more places for adsense advertisements. Note that the service is branded as “Google Co-op”. What makes it different from the previous version of Google Co-op? It seems to me that with Google Marker for the co-op CSEs, Google has provided an incentive for users to annotate the web for them.

I don’t think I have a problem with this, but it is something that users should keep in mind.

Anyway. This morning I decided to try making my own. I’ve been collecting feeds for information libraryfolk care about for a few months (I’ll explain why in a future post), so I uploaded about 1000 of them and created a CSE to be a “Librarianship Feed Finder.”

Give it a try:


Here’s a test search to see which LIS feeds have recently mentioned Meredith Farkas.

Here’s a test search to find feeds that mention Library 2.0.

Its neat and sort of interesting, but really not extremely useful.

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