The Nutrition Society and IFIS Publishing announced earlier in February the launch of the Nutritional Science Collection.
The Nutritional Science Collection is a human-curated database, designed to aid information discovery for nutrition researchers.
An advisory board composed of Nutrition Society members have contributed their insights into current and emerging issues facing the nutrition community. This has guided the development and content of the Nutritional Science collection, and IFIS' information literacy initiatives.
In today’s scientific information landscape, it is relatively easy to find large amounts of information, but harder to identify the relevant and reliable research needed to support scientific endeavours. The Nutritional Science Collection provides researchers and students with a simple and effective way to find the research and information that they need and can trust.
Scientists, students, and information professionals worldwide currently use IFIS’ gold standard FSTA database. It is the key resource for academics and researchers, searching over sixty years of research and information in the sciences of food and health. Through this partnership between The Nutrition Society and IFIS, this content is rendered more accessible and discoverable than ever before to those working and studying in nutrition.
Professor Julie Lovegrove, president of The Nutrition Society, said: “I am delighted that we are partnering with IFIS to promote the use of high-quality nutritional science. At a time of information overload and the rise in predatory journals, it can be challenging to find trusted sources. The database, developed by a new Academic Board formed of our members and IFIS, aims to solve these issues and to support the nutrition community by providing an authoritative searchable database of nutritional science.
“This partnership will also support students and early career researchers by providing training on how to access and use high quality science, an ambition that is embedded in our new strategic plan. I hope that you will find this database of great help in your research.”
Keywords from the unique FSTA Thesaurus and relevant records from FSTA are carefully selected to construct a nutrition-specific collection of abstracts. The records include journals, conference proceedings, book chapters and patents. The database includes full metadata searching, filtering, linking through authors and journals, date ranges, keyword searching and browsing through categories, for maximum discoverability.
Jonathan Griffin, managing director of IFIS, said: “We are very pleased to have been able to work with the Nutrition Society to create the world's most trustworthy nutritional science database. It is the only database of its kind that has been curated by subject experts and so delivers the most relevant and comprehensive search results.
“Furthermore, the curation means that fake science is weeded out. We expect that the database will save researchers time and help them avoid making mistakes, so will make a significant contribution to the advance of nutritional science.”
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