Dissociating the good literature from the bad literature is an endeavor we all do individually(but not for long: ChemRank). If only there was some website where we could tell whether that syn. prep. is accurate or that physical model is valid. The current methods to determine the validity of the literature are: to perform the same experiment, try to determine this from how many people cite that article, go ask around the department for someone who did something similar, try to relate the quality of the paper from the h-index of the author. | |
But, what if you still want more? What if you want something more than a numerical qualifier of a paper's worthiness, or of an author's scientific quality? What if you want to have a discussion beyond the scope of your labmates? What if you want to have an intellectual discussion about the current chemical literature with every other chemist on the planet? How do you do this and where do you begin?
The chemical blogosphere has done a rather good job in keeping the community of internet savvy chemists a breasted on some of the latest and coolest research (
http://wiki.cubic.uni-koeln.de/cb/index.php). But, unless you have a huge audience and build a faithful readership, no one will ever know your views and it can be rather difficult to have an intellectual conversation with just yourself.
With all this in mind, I set out to create a website that would overcome these historic limitations to academic communication. I created a new website called
ChemRank:
http://www.chemrank.com Screen Shot shown Below At ChemRank you can add a paper to the database and then vote whether you find it a good or bad paper. You can also leave comments critiquing the yield or congratulating the authors on a job well done. Most importantly, there is a public record of your views! Your pain does not need to be repeated if you point out the problematic reaction or the incorrect eqn in the comments section.
An other cool feature of ChemRank is the building of a database that knows the good chemical literature from the bad chemical literature. Currently, there is no database to my knowledge, except your own brain or PI's brain, that tracks this information. Although,
Noel's experiments with Connotea is a step in the right direction.
There is even something for the already established pioneers in online chemical literature discussions (aka chemical bloggers) too. For each paper added to the database a script, behind the scenes, will generate a little code snippet to allow voting on the literature your discussing on your blog too. For example, if you are discussing the recent paper "Atomic Structure of Graphene on SiO2" you can generate the following from copy/pasting a code snippet. Assuming you've already added the paper to the database and clicked the link: "
add to your blog"
This by no means is a completed project, there is still much more to do.
- Make links that show the papers posted last 7days, 1month, 1 year, all time
- Make users register before posting.
- Add the ability to tag the articles with relevant keywords
- Make a pipe's rss feed of the author's most recent papers, on the fly and behind the scenes, display in the description as well.
- Make an api so others can access the database and use it for cool-new mashups.
- Add a search feature, but that is kind of pointless while the database has less than 10 papers in it.
All of the above can be done in time, but it depends on the feedback from the community and the popularity of the website. As with all projects, I don't necessarily expect it to catch on right away if at all. A lot of times I code, simply to show how to do it, and how to do it well. Allowing public comment on the current literature is something the chemical publishers should be doing anyways, now we no longer have to wait for them...
Mitch