Vera Multi-Search - Vera had a makeover! The new Vera Multi-Search will still help you find electronic journals, databases, and e-books, and now it will also help you search for articles within journals, conference proceedings, etc. See the FAQ page for more information.
PDF delivery from the Library Storage Annex Looking for a journal article, conference proceeding, technical report or book chapter that’s in the Library Storage Annex? Use the “Request PDF” button in the Barton catalog record to get PDF delivery to your desktop. This service is free to members of the MIT community with an Illiad account.
Manage Your Research Data More Effectively The Libraries have a new resource to help you in managing research data that you produce. Check out the guide to Data Management and Publishing.
Printing, Copying and Scanning Improvements Hayden, Barker, Dewey and Rotch Libraries are moving to TechCASH with new copiers and scanners.You’ll now be able to use TechCASH (MIT ID) to pay at copiers, print for free (MIT community only) through Athena printers, and make color scans that you can email or save to your USB drive.See the Printing FAQ and the TechCASH FAQ for more information.
And coming soon…
Look for an expanded Libraries presence in Stellar including a link to the MIT Libraries Quick Start!
Undergraduate Students || Graduate Students || All Students
Attend these events to become familiar with what the Libraries have to offer – our staff, collections, services, and resources.
UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS:
Academic Expo
What: An expo of MIT’s academic departments and programs. The Libraries will be ready to answer your questions and offer information about our resources and services. Pick up handouts and goodies.
When: Wednesday, August 27, 3:00 - 4:30 pm
Where: Johnson Athletics Center (W34). Look for the Libraries’ banner.
Freshmen Explorations: Ice Cream Social
What: Build your own ice cream sundae!
When: Thursday, August 28, 3:00 - 4:30 pm
Where: Lipchitz Courtyard (Building 14); rain location: hallway in front of Hayden Library (Building 14)
Hitchhiker’s Guide Library Tours
What: A walking tour of all the MIT Libraries, with special gifts for the first 10 attendees at each tour.
When: Saturday, August 23, 2008, 1:30 p.m; Thursday, August 28, 11:00 am;Thursday, August 28, 2:00 p.m.
SciFinder is now also available on the web. The traditional downloadable “client” version will continue to be available, but will be phased out over the next 6-10 months.
The MIT Libraries subscription allows a total of eleven (11) simultaneous users between the web (one-time registration required) and the client versions. Those 11 “seats” have been divided between the two versions. If one version reports that all seats are taken, please try again later or try the other version.
For more information, see the SciFinder guide. If you have any questions, contact the Chemistry Librarian, Erja Kajosalo.
You may be a skilled investigator on the topic of science or engineering, but what do you know about business research? This session will introduce you to library-supported databases that cover company and industry information. We will use hands-on exercises to demonstrate strategies for researching two key components of a business plan: competitors and industry trends.
While you won’t come out of this session qualified to be a patent attorney, you will be able to successfully find patent references from all over the world and know how to obtain patent text and diagrams. The session will be a hands-on practicum that will help de-mystify the patent literature and expose attendees to key resources for finding patents through free resources available on the web.
Feel free to bring your lunch! Drinks and dessert will be provided.
Geared for graduate students, this workshop addresses what copyright means to you as an author, how you can assess a publisher’s copyright policies, and how you can use web-based tools that assess journal quality. Open access publishing models and the use of the MIT amendment to alter standard publisher agreements will also be discussed.
Feel free to bring your lunch! Drinks and dessert will be provided.
For the safety of the MIT community, the Dewey Library will be closed on Saturday, July 19th. The temporary entrance to E53 will be closed due to demolition work on the Sloan Plaza.
Dewey will be open as usual on Sunday the 20thfrom 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.. We apologize for any inconvenience.
We have ChemBioDraw for another year! The MIT Libraries continue to make this premier chemistry and biology drawing tool available to the entire MIT community thanks, partly, to the generous financial support from the Chemistry, Chemical Engineering, Materials Science & Engineering Departments, and Broad Institute.
The Barker Engineering Library is reorganizing its collections this summer to create room for the growth of book collections and to provide better access to materials.
In recent years, the Engineering and Science Libraries have greatly increased their electronic journal subscriptions.As a result of increased digital access, many of the print equivalents were moved to the Library Storage Annex (LSA).The space gained as a result of the collection move will allow Barker to rearrange collections, creating room for long-term growth.
Additionally, Barker’s journal collection will no longer be organized alphabetically by title.Instead, the collection has been given call numbers, which now appear in Barton, the Libraries’ online catalog.The new classification will make it easier to find the volume you need on the shelf.
The journal collection is currently being moved to its new location on the 8th floor, in its new call number order.If you have any questions during the reorganization, please ask for assistance at the service desk.
Class attendees will learn about the organization of key NCBI databases, understand the database record structure, and work with the BLAST search tool. The session is a hands-on practicum and an excellent starting point for people who are new to, or curious about bioinformatics research tools.
Feel free to bring your lunch! Drinks and dessert will be provided.
EndNote is a “personal bibliographic software” package which allows you to create and manage a database of bibliographic references. Your database can be used to automatically generate in-text citations and bibliographies in your manuscripts. It can also help you organize and manage your PDF files. This session will be a hands-on practicum. Attendees will create a personal database of cited literature by importing references from resources such as Barton, Web of Science, PubMed and other sources of published literature. You will learn how to search and manipulate databases, and to generate a manuscript and bibliography.
Feel free to bring your lunch! Drinks and dessert will be provided.
Check out the new bioinformatics video tutorials, developed by the MIT Engineering and Science Libraries and Harvard’s Countway Library of Medicine. These tutorials aim to bring research help to your desktop.
The first installment of BITS covers the UCSC Genome Browser, which contains reference sequences and working draft assemblies for a large collection of genomes. The UCSC Genome Browser is developed and maintained by the Genome Bioinformatics Group, a cross-departmental team within the Center for Biomolecular Science and Engineering at UCSC.
Watch these videos to learn more about the UCSC Genome Browser. Learn how to retrieve DNA sequence, display and configure the annotation tracks, identify gene intron-exon boundaries, and use the BLAT tool.
Were you unable to attend a Libraries’ sponsored IAP session this January? Wish you could have attended the March workshops on Building an EndNote Library, or the recent class on Google Maps?
The Libraries are pleased to unveil recordings of our popular workshops. The sessions were recorded in cooperation with Academic Media Production Services (AMPS) and are viewable both on and off campus with your MIT Certificates.
Citation Surfing: Using Databases to Track Article Citations
Michael Noga
Learn how to find and use information more effectively in our hands-on workshops. No advanced registration required. Light refreshments will be served at each session.
**NOTE that different events will be happening throughout the month of April and early May.**
WHERE: 14N-132 (Digital Instruction Resource Center – DIRC)
WHEN: Friday, May 2, 12pm (noon)
Have your ever used the Web of Science to find citations? Have you used Google Scholar? Perhaps you have used citation links in journal articles. This session will explore the different ways you can use citation searching to identify literature on a subject.
The MIT Libraries now subscribe to over 2,000 e-books from CRC Press, adding 7 new subject collections, including chemistry, engineering, energy, materials science and polymers, nanotechnology, and mathematics.
To search all titles available to the MIT Community, visit CRCnetBASE, or go to each individual subject collection to browse titles. With time, we will add records of these items to our catalog, Barton to make finding them easier.
List of individual CRCnetBASEs added to our collections:
Googler Pamela Fox will give a whirlwind tour of the Google Maps API and KML, teaching the basics of each and showing off some of the really fun applications of them (like campus maps, interactive panoramas, and fantasy worlds).
Google Maps Codelab (6 - 7 pm)
Interactive codelabs in the topics addressed in the Introduction to Google Maps API. Codelab participants should come prepared with basic Javascript or XML experience, and will find debugging the Maps API easier if they have Firebug installed.
Bioinformatics for Beginners
Amy Stout, Courtney Crummett
Learn how to find and use information more effectively in our hands-on workshops. No advanced registration required. Light refreshments will be served at each session.
**NOTE that different events will be happening throughout the month of April and early May.**
WHERE: 14N-132 (Digital Instruction Resource Center – DIRC)
WHEN: Friday, April 18, 12pm (noon)
Class attendees will learn about the organization of key NCBI databases, understand the database record structure, and work with the BLAST search tool. The session is a hands-on practicum and an excellent starting point for people who are new to, or curious about bioinformatics research tools.