3:55

How to do Search articles in Pubmed Central
How to do Search articles in Pubmed Central....
published: 18 Jan 2012
author: Suhazeli Abdullah
How to do Search articles in Pubmed Central
How to do Search articles in Pubmed Central
How to do Search articles in Pubmed Central.- published: 18 Jan 2012
- views: 278
- author: Suhazeli Abdullah
7:04

PubMed Centralの使い方
高画質版はこちら http://togotv.dbcls.jp/20100610.html#p01 PubMedは米国立医学図書館(National Library of Medi...
published: 01 Jul 2010
author: togotv
PubMed Centralの使い方
PubMed Centralの使い方
高画質版はこちら http://togotv.dbcls.jp/20100610.html#p01 PubMedは米国立医学図書館(National Library of Medicine)が維持・管理している文献情報データベースで、2010年4月でおよそ 2000万件の文献情報を提供しており、検索が月におよ...- published: 01 Jul 2010
- views: 550
- author: togotv
10:00

Ten Years of PubMed Central
What can researchers expect next from PubMed Central? David Lipman, Director of the Nation...
published: 26 Apr 2010
author: cdrsvideo
Ten Years of PubMed Central
Ten Years of PubMed Central
What can researchers expect next from PubMed Central? David Lipman, Director of the National Center for Biotechnology Information at the National Library of ...- published: 26 Apr 2010
- views: 308
- author: cdrsvideo
9:04

PMC(PubMedCentral)の使い方
本家はこちら http://togotv.dbcls.jp/20130522.html#p01 PubMedは米国立医学図書館(National Library of Medici...
published: 22 May 2013
author: togotv
PMC(PubMedCentral)の使い方
PMC(PubMedCentral)の使い方
本家はこちら http://togotv.dbcls.jp/20130522.html#p01 PubMedは米国立医学図書館(National Library of Medicine)が維持・管理している文献情報データベースで、2010年4月でおよそ 2000万件の文献情報を提供しており、検索が月におよそ7,...- published: 22 May 2013
- views: 56
- author: togotv
4:09

Europe PubMed Central Expanding access to publicly funded research Anna Kinsey
Abstract Europe PubMed Central (Europe PMC) is a unique, free information resource for lif...
published: 05 Nov 2012
author: BerlinTEN SA
Europe PubMed Central Expanding access to publicly funded research Anna Kinsey
Europe PubMed Central Expanding access to publicly funded research Anna Kinsey
Abstract Europe PubMed Central (Europe PMC) is a unique, free information resource for life sciences researchers, backed by a growing number of European fund...- published: 05 Nov 2012
- views: 47
- author: BerlinTEN SA
3:14

UK PubMed Central: the resource of choice for the UK's biomedical and health research community
Dr Ingo Schiessl and Dr Stuart Allan, research scienitists and lecturers at the University...
published: 25 Aug 2010
author: UKPMC
UK PubMed Central: the resource of choice for the UK's biomedical and health research community
UK PubMed Central: the resource of choice for the UK's biomedical and health research community
Dr Ingo Schiessl and Dr Stuart Allan, research scienitists and lecturers at the University of Manchester, meet to discuss the merits of using UK PubMed Centr...- published: 25 Aug 2010
- views: 1817
- author: UKPMC
3:22

PubMed Central (Basic Searching)- Video 6 for NURB 327
...
published: 11 Jul 2013
author: CamdenCarrollLibrary
PubMed Central (Basic Searching)- Video 6 for NURB 327
PubMed Central (Basic Searching)- Video 6 for NURB 327
- published: 11 Jul 2013
- views: 5
- author: CamdenCarrollLibrary
1:47

Exporting Citations from PubMed Central to RefWorks
Instructions for exporting citations to RefWorks....
published: 17 Oct 2012
author: McKee Library
Exporting Citations from PubMed Central to RefWorks
Exporting Citations from PubMed Central to RefWorks
Instructions for exporting citations to RefWorks.- published: 17 Oct 2012
- views: 24
- author: McKee Library
21:14

Open access to Telethon publications in the framework of Europe PubMed Central -- Lucia Monaco
Open access to Telethon publications in the framework of Europe PubMed Central -- Lucia Mo...
published: 14 Feb 2013
author: sdum2010
Open access to Telethon publications in the framework of Europe PubMed Central -- Lucia Monaco
Open access to Telethon publications in the framework of Europe PubMed Central -- Lucia Monaco
Open access to Telethon publications in the framework of Europe PubMed Central -- Lucia Monaco, Fondazione Telethon.- published: 14 Feb 2013
- views: 4
- author: sdum2010
1:10

6 Dr Girish KJ pubmedcentral search through pubmed
...
published: 12 Sep 2012
author: Dr Girish K J
6 Dr Girish KJ pubmedcentral search through pubmed
6 Dr Girish KJ pubmedcentral search through pubmed
- published: 12 Sep 2012
- views: 5
- author: Dr Girish K J
2:54

7 Dr Girish KJ pubmedcentral direct search and saving
...
published: 12 Sep 2012
author: Dr Girish K J
7 Dr Girish KJ pubmedcentral direct search and saving
7 Dr Girish KJ pubmedcentral direct search and saving
- published: 12 Sep 2012
- views: 9
- author: Dr Girish K J
51:10

Ten Years of Pub Med Central
What can researchers expect next from PubMed Central? David Lipman, Director of the Nation...
published: 03 Aug 2010
author: columbiauniversity
Ten Years of Pub Med Central
Ten Years of Pub Med Central
What can researchers expect next from PubMed Central? David Lipman, Director of the National Center for Biotechnology Information at the National Library of ...- published: 03 Aug 2010
- views: 381
- author: columbiauniversity
11:09

umh1342 2013-14 U12.10 La recuperación de los documentos primarios PubMed Central
Más vídeos de la colección en el siguiente link: http://bit.ly/1fHl1ZL
La recuperación de...
published: 22 Oct 2013
umh1342 2013-14 U12.10 La recuperación de los documentos primarios PubMed Central
umh1342 2013-14 U12.10 La recuperación de los documentos primarios PubMed Central
Más vídeos de la colección en el siguiente link: http://bit.ly/1fHl1ZL La recuperación de los documentos primarios PubMed Central. Asignatura: Documentación Científica Avanzada. Máster Universitario en Investigación en Medicina Clínica. Profesor: Enrique Perdiguero Gil. Dpto. Salud Pública, Historia de la Ciencia y Ginecología Área de Historia de la Ciencia. Proyecto PLE 2013. Universidad Miguel Hernández de Elche. Cómo acceder al texto completo de los documentos cuya referencia se ha encontrado en MEDLINE a través de PubMed. El repositorio de la NLM, PubMed Central. web asignatura: http://umh1342.edu.umh.es/ web: http://umh.es- published: 22 Oct 2013
- views: 6
Vimeo results:
59:58

CANCER-GATE - The Rick Simpson Story
A Video By EssiacHempLaetrile
http://www.youtube.com/user/EssiacHempLaetrile
http://www.yo...
published: 08 Apr 2010
author: qnbs7
CANCER-GATE - The Rick Simpson Story
A Video By EssiacHempLaetrile
http://www.youtube.com/user/EssiacHempLaetrile
http://www.youtube.com/user/EssiacHempLaetrile2
Edited by qnbs7
http://qnbs7.blogspot.com
http://qnbs7.wordpress.com
Rick Simpson interviewed by blogtalkradio:
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/missionunstoppable/2008/10/01/rick-simpsonrun-from-the-cure
Internet Archive: http://archive.org/details/Cancergate-TheRickSimpsonStory
MP4: http://archive.org/download/Cancergate-TheRickSimpsonStory/CANCER-GATE-TheRickSimpsonStory.mp4
torrent: http://archive.org/download/Cancergate-TheRickSimpsonStory/Cancergate-TheRickSimpsonStory_archive.torrent
SOURCES:
THC Ministry, Amsterdam - Info on Cannabinoids: http://www.thc-ministry.net/cannabisinfo.htm
MEDLINE/PubMed - National Institutes of Health (NIH): http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/
PubMed Central: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC20983/
Professor Raphael Mechoulam - Center for Research on Pain: http://paincenter.huji.ac.il/mechoulam.htm
The New Science of Cannabinoid-Based Medicine: An Interview with Dr. Raphael Mechoulam: http://mosthi.com/the-new-science-of-cannabinoid-based-medicine-an-interview-with-dr-raphael-mechoulam/
Jack Herer - The Emperor Wears No Clothes, Chapter Six: The Body of Medical Literature on Cannabis Medicine: http://www.jackherer.com/
Faculty Question & Answer - 2004 Cannabis Therapeutics Conference (GoogleVideo 4:43): http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-2846404478008311813#
Cannabinoid System in Neuroprotection, Raphael Mechoulam, PhD (GoogleVideo 16:54): http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=4736563701346383014#
Cannabis destroys cancer cells... reveals research at Barts and The London, Queen Mary's School of Medicine and Dentistry: http://www.qmul.ac.uk/news/newsrelease.php?news_id=175
The SETH Group: http://thesethgroup.org/
American Medical Marijuana Association: http://americanmarijuana.org/clip.mice.tumor.gif
Cancer Research UK: http://scienceblog.cancerresearchuk.org/2009/08/19/cannabinoids-for-treating-cancer/
Journal of the National Cancer Institute: http://jnci.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/djm268v1
ConspiracyCards - Hemp Cure: http://www.conspiracycards.com/hemp_cure.htm
ConspiracyCards - Hemp Oil: http://www.conspiracycards.com/hemp_oil.htm
Dean Ornish says your genes are not your fate: http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/dean_ornish_says_your_genes_are_not_your_fate.html
PubMed Cannabinoids:
Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/qnbs7/sets/72157623830488799/show/
Picasa: http://picasaweb.google.de/qnbs420/PubMedCannabinoids
Rick Simpson's Official website: http://www.phoenixtears.ca/
Rick Simpson's Official links to make his Cancer Cure Hemp Oil
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KZXGH6mYr3Y
Rick Simpson's Official You Tube channel
http://www.youtube.com/user/chrychek
Rick Simpson's Official Facebook page
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=7912959643
Run From The Cure - Phoenix Tears Movie: http://www.phoenixtearsmovie.com
Buy E-Book: Phoenix Tears - The Rick Simpson Story: http://phoenixtears.ca/buy-phoenixtears-the-rick-simpson-story/
2:19

DNA - Replication, Wrapping & Mitosis
Multidimensional Genome – Dr. Robert Carter – video
http://www.metacafe.com/watch/8905048/...
published: 18 Dec 2011
author: Philip Cunningham
DNA - Replication, Wrapping & Mitosis
Multidimensional Genome – Dr. Robert Carter – video
http://www.metacafe.com/watch/8905048/
The Extreme Complexity Of Genes – Dr. Raymond G. Bohlin - video
http://www.metacafe.com/watch/8593991/
DNA Wrapping (Histone Protein Wrapping to Cell Division)- video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gbSIBhFwQ4s
Did DNA replication evolve twice independently? - Koonin
Excerpt: However, several core components of the bacterial (DNA) replication machinery are unrelated or only distantly related to the functionally equivalent components of the archaeal/eukaryotic (DNA) replication apparatus.
http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/27/17/3389
Was our oldest ancestor a proton-powered rock?
Excerpt: In particular, the detailed mechanics of DNA replication would have been quite different. It looks as if DNA replication evolved independently in bacteria and archaea,... Even more baffling, says Martin, neither the cell membranes nor the cell walls have any details in common.
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20427306.200-was-our-oldest-ancestor-a-protonpowered-rock.html?page=1
Here’s a Very Complicated and Unique DNA Finding That Contradicts Evolution - Cornelius Hunter - April 2012
Excerpt: As your teacher assured you, evolution would be instantly falsified and discarded by all scientists if somewhere in the tree of life some organisms here or there revealed some other way of doing business.,, Well guess what? One-off solutions are all over the evolutionary tree. The pattern that evolutionists expected didn’t turn out.
http://darwins-god.blogspot.com/2012/04/heres-very-complicated-and-unique-dna.html
You Won’t Believe This One, Even Evolutionists Call it “Totally Crazy” - Cornelius Hunter - April 2012 (Link to article and video lecture)
Excerpt: It doesn’t make any sense on evolution not only because these are highly unique designs, but they then appear repeatedly, in otherwise very distant species. This is not what evolution expected and this is far beyond any level of evolutionary noise. Nor will the oft-used gene transfer explanation work in this case. This is an instance of massive convergence that makes no sense on evolution.
http://darwins-god.blogspot.com/2012/04/you-wont-believe-this-one-even.html
Dr. Jerry Bergman, "Divine Engineering: Unraveling DNA's Design":
The DNA packing process is both complex and elegant and is so efficient that it achieves a reduction in length of DNA by a factor of 1 million.
http://www.harunyahya.com/books/darwinism/if_darwin_had_known/if_darwin_had_known06.php#dipnot
DNA Packaging: Nucleosomes and Chromatin
Excerpt: each of us has enough DNA to go from here to the Sun and back more than 300 times, or around Earth's equator 2.5 million times! How is this possible?
http://www.nature.com/scitable/topicpage/DNA-Packaging-Nucleosomes-and-Chromatin-310
Comprehensive Mapping of Long-Range Interactions Reveals Folding Principles of the Human Genome - Oct. 2009
Excerpt: At the megabase scale, the chromatin conformation is consistent with a fractal globule, a knot-free, polymer conformation that enables maximally dense packing while preserving the ability to easily fold and unfold any genomic locus.
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/326/5950/289
3-D Structure Of Human Genome: Fractal Globule Architecture Packs Two Meters Of DNA Into Each Cell - Oct. 2009
Excerpt: the information density in the nucleus is trillions of times higher than on a computer chip -- while avoiding the knots and tangles that might interfere with the cell's ability to read its own genome. Moreover, the DNA can easily unfold and refold during gene activation, gene repression, and cell replication.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/10/091008142957.htm
Scientists' 3-D View of Genes-at-Work Is Paradigm Shift in Genetics - Dec. 2009
Excerpt: Highly coordinated chromosomal choreography leads genes and the sequences controlling them, which are often positioned huge distances apart on chromosomes, to these 'hot spots'. Once close together within the same transcription factory, genes get switched on (a process called transcription) at an appropriate level at the right time in a specific cell type. This is the first demonstration that genes encoding proteins with related physiological role visit the same factory.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/12/091215160649.htm
600 Genes Involved in Fundamental Cell Division - Cornelius Hunter - July 2011
Excerpt: The hundreds of genes are involved in an absolutely fundamental biological process is yet another example of evolution’s failure to explain biology.
http://darwins-god.blogspot.com/2011/07/600-genes-involved-in-fundamental-cell.html
Dividing Cells 'Feel' Their Way Out Of Warp
"What we found is an exquisitely tuned mechanosensory system that keeps the cells shipshape so they can divide properly," - Douglas N. Robinson, Ph.D.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/09/090910142402.htm
Getting a tighter grip on cell
19:06

The Digital Code of DNA and the Unimagined Complexity of a 'Simple' Bacteria - Rabbi Moshe Averick
Entire video is at the following site:
Nonsense of a High Order: The Confused and Illusor...
published: 26 Jan 2012
author: Philip Cunningham
The Digital Code of DNA and the Unimagined Complexity of a 'Simple' Bacteria - Rabbi Moshe Averick
Entire video is at the following site:
Nonsense of a High Order: The Confused and Illusory World of the Atheist.
A Scientific Case for God by Rabbi Moshe Averick - video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=isr90m-ccgE
Notes on DNA;
Even the leading "New Atheist" in the world, Richard Dawkins, agrees that DNA functions exactly like digital code:
Richard Dawkins Opens Mouth, Inserts Foot - video
http://www.evolutionnews.org/2010/06/richard_dawkins_opens_mouth_in035861.html
The Digital Code of DNA - 2003 - Leroy Hood & David Galas
Excerpt: The discovery of the structure of DNA transformed biology profoundly, catalysing the sequencing of the human genome and engendering a new view of biology as an information science.
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v421/n6921/full/nature01410.html
Every Bit Digital DNA’s Programming Really Bugs Some ID Critics - March 2010
Excerpt: In 2003 renowned biologist Leroy Hood and biotech guru David Galas authored a review article in the world’s leading scientific journal, Nature, titled, “The digital code of DNA.”,,, MIT Professor of Mechanical Engineering Seth Lloyd (no friend of ID) likewise eloquently explains why DNA has a “digital” nature: "It’s been known since the structure of DNA was elucidated that DNA is very digital. There are four possible base pairs per site, two bits per site, three and a half billion sites, seven billion bits of information in the human DNA. There’s a very recognizable digital code of the kind that electrical engineers rediscovered in the 1950s that maps the codes for sequences of DNA onto expressions of proteins."
http://www.salvomag.com/new/articles/salvo12/12luskin2.php
Stephen C. Meyer - Signature In The Cell:
"DNA functions like a software program," "We know from experience that software comes from programmers. Information--whether inscribed in hieroglyphics, written in a book or encoded in a radio signal--always arises from an intelligent source. So the discovery of digital code in DNA provides evidence that the information in DNA also had an intelligent source."
http://www.evolutionnews.org/2009/07/leading_advocate_of_intelligen.html
Extreme Software Design In Cells - Stephen Meyer - video
http://www.metacafe.com/watch/5495397/
Upright Biped Replies to Dr. Moran on “Information” - December 2011
Excerpt: 'a fair reading suggests that the information transfer in the genome shouldn’t be expected to adhere to the qualities of other forms of information transfer. But as it turns out, it faithfully follows the same physical dynamics as any other form of recorded information.'
http://www.uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/upright-biped-replies-to-dr-moran-on-information/
Three Subsets of Sequence Complexity and Their Relevance to Biopolymeric Information - David L. Abel and Jack T. Trevors - Theoretical Biology & Medical Modelling, Vol. 2, 11 August 2005, page 8
"No man-made program comes close to the technical brilliance of even Mycoplasmal genetic algorithms. Mycoplasmas are the simplest known organism with the smallest known genome, to date. How was its genome and other living organisms' genomes programmed?"
http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/pdf/1742-4682-2-29.pdf
Human DNA is like a computer program but far, far more advanced than any software we've ever created.
Bill Gates, The Road Ahead, 1996, p. 188
Bill Gates, in recognizing the superiority found in Genetic Coding compared to the best computer coding we now have, has now funded research into this area:
Welcome to CoSBi - (Computational and Systems Biology)
Excerpt from early 2010 (the following heading is now changed on the site): Biological systems are the most parallel systems ever studied and we hope to use our better understanding of how living systems handle information to design new computational paradigms, programming languages and software development environments. The net result would be the design and implementation of better applications firmly grounded on new computational, massively parallel paradigms in many different areas.
http://www.cosbi.eu/index.php/component/content/article/171
Programming of Life - Biological Computers - video
http://www.youtube.com/user/Programmingoflife#p/c/AFDF33F11E2FB840/5/hRooe6ehrPs
The Coding Found In DNA Surpasses Man's Ability To Code - Stephen Meyer - video
http://www.metacafe.com/watch/4050638
Life Leads the Way to Invention - Feb. 2010
Excerpt: a cell is 10,000 times more energy-efficient than a transistor. “ In one second, a cell performs about 10 million energy-consuming chemical reactions, which altogether require about one picowatt (one millionth millionth of a watt) of power.” This and other amazing facts lead to an obvious conclusion: inventors ought to look to life for ideas.,,, Essentially, cells may be viewed as circuits that use molecules, ions, proteins and DNA instead of electrons and transistors. That analogy suggests that it should be possible to build electronic chips – what S
3:23

2. Finding a Full Text Article in HINARI
[more free HINARI training, including Universal Subtitles at hinaritraining.org/]
Transc...
published: 21 Jun 2011
author: HINARI Training
2. Finding a Full Text Article in HINARI
[more free HINARI training, including Universal Subtitles at hinaritraining.org/]
Transcript of video:
HINARI provides access to the full text of many journals. This video will demonstrate how to find the full text of a specific article.
Go to HINARI at www.who.int/hinari and click to log in. If you do not know your institution’s user name and password, contact the librarian at your institution.
Be sure to citation information for the article. This includes the article title, authors, journal name, publication date, volume, issue, and page number. This information will help you drill down to the article. As an example, we will look for this article on stillbirths from the Lancet.
Start with the journal title, Lancet, then browse to the volume and issue. Scroll down to find the correct page number and the article of interest.
Not all journals look alike. If you do not easily see the option to browse by year or volume, look for language like Browse Archive, or Past Issues.
Here is the article we are looking for. Click on PDF if you would like to print or save your article to your computer or flash drive. Click on the Print icon to print the document, and the save icon to save the document to your USB flash drive or computer.
If you do not find the journal or the article that you are looking for, it may not be available. Since some journals offer articles for free, the PubMed Single Citation Matcher is a good second place to check for full text.
Return to the HINARI content homepage. then Click on the “Search inside HINARI full-text using PubMed” link.
This will open a new window for PubMed.
In this example, we will look for this article from the Ghana Medical Journal on congenital malaria in newborn twins.
Now click on Single Citation Matcher under PubMed tools.
Enter at least two pieces of information from your citation and click Go.
This is the reference in PubMed. To connect to the full text, look for the HINARI button, or a link to Free Full Text. This article is available for free through PubMed Central.
If you do not see a HINARI or free full text button, then the article may not be available through HINARI or for free. If this is the case, talk to your librarian about access options, including whether the article might be available in print or from another institution.
Youtube results:
1:47

The xPatterns Explorer for PubMed - DEMO
The xPatterns Explorer for PubMed: http://pubmed.xpatterns.com/ Through xPatterns, documen...
published: 24 Jul 2012
author: AtigeoXpatterns
The xPatterns Explorer for PubMed - DEMO
The xPatterns Explorer for PubMed - DEMO
The xPatterns Explorer for PubMed: http://pubmed.xpatterns.com/ Through xPatterns, document discovery is no longer a linear search problem. Atigeo's xPattern...- published: 24 Jul 2012
- views: 304
- author: AtigeoXpatterns
3:08

UK Pub Med Central
UK PubMed Central (www.ukpmc.ac.uk) is a UK free archive of life sciences journals develop...
published: 08 Jan 2010
author: BIPCTV
UK Pub Med Central
UK Pub Med Central
UK PubMed Central (www.ukpmc.ac.uk) is a UK free archive of life sciences journals developed by the National Institutes of Health National Centre for Biotech...- published: 08 Jan 2010
- views: 667
- author: BIPCTV
4:07

Advanced Searching in PubMed
This tutorial illustrates how to run an advanced search in PubMed and how to use limiters....
published: 01 Dec 2010
author: wnylrctutorials
Advanced Searching in PubMed
Advanced Searching in PubMed
This tutorial illustrates how to run an advanced search in PubMed and how to use limiters. It was originally created for a presentation on how to make video ...- published: 01 Dec 2010
- views: 1263
- author: wnylrctutorials
1:08

PubMed Literature Database
http://www.abnova.com ) - PubMed is a free literature database which comprises more than 2...
published: 25 Oct 2010
author: ABNOVA1
PubMed Literature Database
PubMed Literature Database
http://www.abnova.com ) - PubMed is a free literature database which comprises more than 20 million citations for biomedical literature from MEDLINE, life ...- published: 25 Oct 2010
- views: 315
- author: ABNOVA1