Wednesday, 27 June 2012

TODAY: Gems from the Collections - Gilded Vectors

Staff and students are invited to have a closer look at the wonderful historical collections relating to the bronze gilded disease vectors displayed on the outside of the building. Today (27th June) between 12pm and 2pm on the ground floor of the South Courtyard, the Library & Archives Service is holding a 'Gems from the Collections ' session where staff will be available to show you some of the rare and unique documents, artefacts and books that we hold relating to diseases carried and transmitted by the louse, rat, mosquito, bedbug, flea, snake, tick and tsetse fly.
There is no need to make an appointment, just drop by and see us outside the Manson Lecture Theatre and find out more about the School's historical collections.
All eight episodes of the Mustard Club radio series based on the School's gilded vectors are now available as podcasts at: http://www.lshtm.ac.uk/newsevents/multimedia/podcasts/2012/the_gilded_vectors_of_disease.html

Wednesday, 20 June 2012

Alumni Tea Party in the Library on Thursday 28th June

The Library will be closing at 12 pm on Thursday 28th June as it will be hosting the LSHTM Alumni Tea Party. Normal service will resume on Friday 29th June at 8.30am.

Free Lunch

Free Lunch

The Library & Archives Service is offering a free lunch at two events next week in return for your thoughts on our services. Lunch for MSc students will be available on Monday 25th June and lunch for research degree students and staff on Tuesday 26th June - both are in LG9 at Keppel Street, 1pm - 2pm.


To reserve sandwiches (or let us know about specific dietary requirements) MSc students should email david.archer@lshtm.ac.uk and research degree students and staff should email jane.falconer@lshtm.ac.uk. Come along. Talk. Eat.

Wednesday, 13 June 2012

Ovid Medline® interface change revision

Notice from OvidSP

On June 6, 2012 Ovid made a modification to the Reprint/Medlars export, save, and print output for the Abstract field that impacted imports to bibliographic management tools. As of June 12th, Ovid has reversed this modification to the output, and the output format will revert to the previous format until this issue is resolved.
Any alerts received from June 6th through June 11th will have been affected by the output modification change. Customers with affected alerts can re-run their alerts to get the old format starting Tuesday, June 12th.
If you should have any questions concerning this change, please contact us at support@ovid.com.
Wolters Kluwer Health – Ovid

Thursday, 7 June 2012

Gems from the Collections: Gilded Vectors

Staff and students are invited to have a closer look at the wonderful historical collections relating to the bronze gilded disease vectors displayed on the outside of the building. On Wednesday 27th June, between 12pm and 2pm on the ground floor of the South Courtyard, the Library & Archives Service is holding a 'Gems from the Collections ' session where staff will be available to show you some of the rare and unique documents, artefacts and books that we hold relating to diseases carried and transmitted by the louse, rat, mosquito, bedbug, flea, snake, tick and tsetse fly.
There is no need to make an appointment, just drop by and see us outside the Manson Lecture Theatre and find out more about the School's historical collections.

For further information, please contact a member of the Archives team at archives@lshtm.ac.uk
All eight episodes of the Mustard Club radio series based on the School's gilded vectors are now available as podcasts at: http://www.lshtm.ac.uk/newsevents/multimedia/podcasts/2012/the_gilded_vectors_of_disease.html

Friday, 1 June 2012

Launch of the 2012 staff and student PhotoLibrary competition

 'Pinned specimens awaiting a name' by Seth Irish, winner of the 2011 staff and student PhotoLibrary competition

It is the time of year again when budding photographers have the opportunity to show off their photographic skills to the rest of the School. Staff and students are encouraged to submit photos which represent the theme of the competition: Life and Work at the School. This can be interpreted fairly widely to reflect work activities - both in London and overseas, studying at the School, social activities and living in London.

The winning entry, chosen by a judging panel, will appear in a forthcoming issue of the Chariot News blog and on the School’s website, and the photographer will receive a £25 gift voucher. All entries will be available for staff and students to view in PhotoLibrary, the School's image database.
Submission guidelines are available on the 2012 PhotoLibrary competition webpage.

The closing date for entries is Friday 17th August 2012

To see previous year’s entries (such as the 2011 winning entry as shown above), go to PhotoLibrary (please note that you will need the login and password which are available on the intranet at: http://intra.lshtm.ac.uk/library/passwords.html, these are different from your School login and password) and search under the competition entries category.

Monday, 28 May 2012

How (and why) LSHTM Research Online works and why we need you!

LSHTM Research Online automatically imports records for all current LSHTM staff research which is published. We harvest these from PubMed, Web of Science and the Schools existing Publications Database run by Andy Reid. If an article is from an open access journal or you have paid for it to be open access we should have automatically pulled in the publisher’s full text PDF of the article.
Where we and the School vitally needs your input is filling the gaps where your articles are not available as free full text because you have published in a traditional-model academic journal. Although we cannot use the publisher’s PDF in these cases, we can make much of your research freely available without breaking copyright.

What we need you to do is:
  •    check your records by going to ‘Browse LSHTM author’ and finding your name
  •   review where there is no article attached to a record
  •   the 'author manuscript' or 'pre-print file' of these articles: this is the peer-reviewed word document, accepted by the publisher, but without any of the publisher's typesetting and copy-editing

We will then upload them to your records, always with a full reference and link to the final publisher’s version. 

Open access policies differ for each publisher, and sometimes each journal. That is why we ask you to contact our team who are experienced in navigating open access publisher policies and will check all rights on your behalf and advise you as to what we can make freely available.
We recently had a public launch for the site where staff involved in trialling updating their full text explained their experiences and the reasons they felt it important to become actively involved. Aside from assuring people about the knowledge and support repository staff can offer Diana Elbourne, Professor of Healthcare Evaluation, declared “If I can do it - anyone can!”


Diana Elbourne speaking at the launch

So you know it’s easy, and you will receive a lot of help, but why take the time to find these files and send them to us?
Speaking at the launch, Peter Piot, our Director, said: “Our work will have a greater impact on policy because people in all organisations including government, charities and development agencies now have easy access to the research we are doing at the School." By participating you are not only increasing access to knowledge for your colleagues in low income countries or smaller institutions; you are contributing to a culture of transparency for taxpayer funded research which showcases the product of public funding.

You are also instantly increasing your own online research profile by exposing records to major search engines like Google. Importantly LSHTM Research Online links will bring visitors back to records often containing free full text - that everyone can access and therefore cite - rather than a pay-to-access gateway to your work. We can also provide you with feeds for other websites where you want your research to be visible, again often with links back to freely available content. If you wish you can monitor activity around your work by reviewing download statistics from LSHTM Research Online.

Want to improve your profile on LSHTM Research Online? Have questions for us? Email researchonline@lshtm.ac.uk