| URL: | http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/ |
| Full name: | NCBI Bookshelf |
| Description: | Bookshelf provides free online access to books and documents in life science and healthcare. Search, read, and discover. |
| Year founded: | 2013 |
| Last update: | 2012-11-22 |
| Version: | |
| Accessibility: |
Accessible
|
| Country/Region: | United States |
| Data type: | |
| Data object: | |
| Database category: | |
| Major species: |
NA
|
| Keywords: |
| University/Institution: | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
| Address: | 45 Center Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA |
| City: | Bethesda |
| Province/State: | MD |
| Country/Region: | United States |
| Contact name (PI/Team): | Bookshelf team |
| Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): | bookshelf@ncbi.nlm.nih.gov |
|
NCBI Bookshelf: books and documents in life sciences and health care. [PMID: 23203889]
Bookshelf (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/) is a full-text electronic literature resource of books and documents in life sciences and health care at the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI). Created in 1999 with a single book as an encyclopedic reference for resources such as PubMed and GenBank, it has grown to its current size of >1300 titles. Unlike other NCBI databases, such as GenBank and Gene, which have a strict data structure, books come in all forms; they are diverse in publication types, formats, sizes and authoring models. The Bookshelf data format is XML tagged in the NCBI Book DTD (Document Type Definition), modeled after the National Library of Medicine journal article DTDs. The book DTD has been used for systematically tagging the diverse data formats of books, a move that has set the foundation for the growth of this resource. Books at NCBI followed the route of journal articles in the PubMed Central project, using the PubMed Central architectural framework, workflows and processes. Through integration with other NCBI molecular databases, books at NCBI can be used to provide reference information for biological data and facilitate its discovery. This article describes Bookshelf at NCBI: its growth, data handling and retrieval and integration with molecular databases. |