Google Scholar debuts

According to Slashdot, Google Scholar debuted yesterday. From the "About" page:

Google Scholar enables you to search specifically for scholarly literature, including peer-reviewed papers, theses, books, preprints, abstracts and technical reports from all broad areas of research. Use Google Scholar to find articles from a wide variety of academic publishers, professional societies, preprint repositories and universities, as well as scholarly articles available across the web.

Just as with Google Web Search, Google Scholar orders your search results by how relevant they are to your query, so the most useful references should appear at the top of the page. This relevance ranking takes into account the full text of each article as well as the article's author, the publication in which the article appeared and how often it has been cited in scholarly literature. Google Scholar also automatically analyzes and extracts citations and presents them as separate results, even if the documents they refer to are not online. This means your search results may include citations of older works and seminal articles that appear only in books or other offline publications.

Please let us know if you have suggestions, questions or comments about Google Scholar. We recognize the debt we owe to all those in academia whose work has made Google itself a reality and we hope to make Google Scholar as useful to this community as possible. We believe everyone should have a chance to stand on the shoulders of giants.

Whether this might eventually offer scholars leverage for opening scholarly publications...I guess we'll see. I'm a little concerned that it'll raise a ruckus from Elsevier and ilk. I'll be playing with this extensively over the next weeks. I'd love to hear others' experiences, too. Maybe KN can become a nice loud voice advising Google on how this service ought to be deployed and used.

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First Reaction to Google Scholar

In general, I like the service, but I've seen instances where it indexes papers published on a course website. It will be a great filtering service. One assumes that the countless undergraduate papers that will be indexed by the service won't themselves be cited by anyone other than other undergraduates, but the sheer numbers of students citing other student work is going to skew the search results.

I've blogged a longer review of Google Scholar.

Dennis G. Jerz

Jerz's Literacy Weblog

platypus matt's picture

Ingenius

I am very excited about this new search engine. Surely this will help alert the public and scholars to the need for more freely accessible scholarship. Just imagine if most all academic journals and books were freely available online, and could be searched and indexed with Google Scholar? The "citation" count is the beauty of it, really...That tool will make it incredibly easy for hiring and promotion committees to measure the influence of a scholar's work.

This will make a huge impact on electronic scholarship (and scholarship in general), mark my words.

Google Scholar beta

In addition to Gmail, Google is beta-testing a new search site, Google Scholar. I’ve dinked around with it a bit, and I’m finding that it is distinctively different from Google or any other search engine I’ve used. GS gives you