X-Received: by 2002:a05:622a:4407:b0:42a:20d:871d with SMTP id ka7-20020a05622a440700b0042a020d871dmr174701qtb.2.1705532675575; Wed, 17 Jan 2024 15:04:35 -0800 (PST) X-Received: by 2002:a25:f801:0:b0:dbe:d0a9:2be3 with SMTP id u1-20020a25f801000000b00dbed0a92be3mr1741ybd.3.1705532674862; Wed, 17 Jan 2024 15:04:34 -0800 (PST) Path: csiph.com!news.swapon.de!newsreader4.netcologne.de!news.netcologne.de!peer02.ams1!peer.ams1.xlned.com!news.xlned.com!peer01.iad!feed-me.highwinds-media.com!news.highwinds-media.com!news-out.google.com!nntp.google.com!postnews.google.com!google-groups.googlegroups.com!not-for-mail Newsgroups: comp.lang.basic.visual.misc Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2024 15:04:34 -0800 (PST) Injection-Info: google-groups.googlegroups.com; posting-host=2a0b:2fc1:db32:d74:eb7a:ec6c:e2ea:65b5; posting-account=18PQtAkAAAAa44gP0uy7aTIVSQK-Y1Vp NNTP-Posting-Host: 2a0b:2fc1:db32:d74:eb7a:ec6c:e2ea:65b5 User-Agent: G2/1.0 MIME-Version: 1.0 Message-ID: <94fb9296-db39-4e5b-bf19-0bc1c4d7338dn@googlegroups.com> Subject: How To Say Download In Other Words From: Raffi Bramlett Injection-Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2024 23:04:35 +0000 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable X-Received-Bytes: 12146 Xref: csiph.com comp.lang.basic.visual.misc:3982 Phrases may appear in a PubMed record but not be in the phrase index. To se= arch for a phrase that is not found in the phrase index, use a proximity se= arch with a distance of 0 (e.g., "cognitive impairment in multiple sclerosi= s"[tiab:0]); this will search for the quoted terms appearing next to each o= ther, in any order. Journal publishers or related organizations may provide access to articles = for free, for free after registering as an individual or guest, or for a fe= e. When provided by the publisher or other organization, icons linking to t= hese sources can be found on the citation's abstract display under the "Ful= l Text Links" and/or "LinkOut" sections. Icons will often indicate free ful= l text when the article is available for free. how to say download in other words Download Zip https://t.co/M7lT7qr8Yc=20 Your local medical library is your best option. If you see icons for your l= ibrary on the abstract view this indicates that your library provides a lin= k to the article, has the journal in its collection, or may otherwise obtai= n the article for you through interlibrary loan. If your library does not h= ave access to the article you need, ask a librarian about ordering the arti= cle from another institution. PubMed abstracts include links to other resources citing the current item. = "Cited by" is generated using data submitted by publishers and from NCBI re= sources, when available. "Cited by" may not be a complete list of works cit= ing a particular item. A grant award or contract may be acknowledged in an article and, therefore,= displayed in PubMed, for various reasons, including support for activities= that contributed directly to the publication as well as support for the ge= neration of an underlying dataset or another shared resource. Additionally,= some articles may not explicitly acknowledge intramural research support, = yet the authors may be affiliated with a funding agency and may have associ= ated their intramural support with a PubMed record at the time of manuscrip= t deposit to PMC. The scope of funding information included in PubMed has expanded over time = to support the public access policies of NIH and other funding organization= s. Since 1981, NLM has included grant or contract numbers or both that desi= gnate financial support by any agency of the United States Public Health Se= rvice (PHS), including NIH. Until 2000, only up to three grant numbers were= included. Beginning in March 2006, funding information was expanded in Pub= Med to include grant, contract, and intramural funding assertions made in N= IHMS and My Bibliography to support the NIH Public Access Policy. Publisher= s have been able to supply funding information directly to PubMed since Jan= uary 2017. For more information on the history of funding information in Pu= bMed, see the Grant Number section of MEDLINE/PubMed Data Element (Field) D= escriptions. When available, links to other related NCBI databases are included on a cit= ation's Abstract page under the Related information section. The complete l= ist of database options is provided in Entrez Link Descriptions. The Clipboard provides a place to collect up to 500 items from one or more = searches. Items saved to the Clipboard are stored in your browser cookies a= nd will expire after 8 hours of inactivity. If you would like to save items= for longer than 8 hours or to view on another device, please use Send to: = Collections. Search results can be saved in My NCBI using the Collections feature. There= is no limit to the number of collections you may store in My NCBI. In addi= tion, collections can be made public to share with others. 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MedlinePlus and MedlinePlus en espa=C3=B1ol are specifically designed for c= onsumers, containing hundreds of topic pages including NIH-written descript= ive information, videos, health check tools, drug, herb and supplement info= , links to Fact Sheets from other NIH Institutes, the CDC, etc., and more. The learned ranking algorithm combines over 150 signals that are helpful fo= r finding best matching results. Most of these signals are computed from th= e query-document term pairs (e.g., number of term matches between the query= and the document) while others are either specific to a document (e.g., pu= blication type; publication year) or query (e.g., query length). The new ra= nking model was built on relevance data extracted from the anonymous and ag= gregated PubMed search logs over an extended period of time. PubMed includes citations to original research articles, literature reviews= , case reports, letters, editorials, commentaries, and other selected publi= cations on scientific and medical topics (see: publication types found in P= ubMed). Some categories of content are out of scope for PubMed, such as: bo= ok reviews, individual conference abstracts, obituaries and in memoriam art= icles, news and announcements, and brief summaries of research articles. Mo= re examples are included in XML Help for PubMed Data Providers: What types = of articles are accepted?. Citations that have been indexed for MEDLINE and updated with NLM Medical S= ubject Headings (MeSH), publication types, GenBank accession numbers, and o= ther indexing data are available daily. To limit your search to MEDLINE cit= ations, add medline[sb] to your search. Bookshelf is a full text archive of books, reports, databases, and other do= cuments related to biomedical, health, and life sciences. PubMed includes c= itations for books and some individual chapters available on Bookshelf. This search will find any citation where the words "Hopkins," "Bloomberg," = and "Public" appear in the same affiliation, with no more than forty-five w= ords between each term. Search results may include: Untagged terms and terms tagged with [all] are processed using Automatic Te= rm Mapping (ATM). Terms that do not map are searched in all search fields e= xcept for Place of Publication, Create Date, Completion Date, Entry Date, M= eSH Date, and Modification Date. Terms enclosed in double quotes or truncat= ed will be searched in all fields and not processed using automatic term ma= pping. PubMed ignores stopwords. The above searches capture book records provided by the NCBI Bookshelf data= base; they exclude a small number of documents from other providers that ap= pear in both PubMed and Bookshelf. For the most comprehensive search of rec= ords appearing in both PubMed and Bookshelf, search "pubmed books"[sb]. The data in these fields are citations to other associated journal publicat= ions, e.g., comments or errata. Often these link to the respective citation= . Comments/Corrections data can be retrieved by the search term that follow= s each type: Note: Citations indexed pre-2000 and some citations indexed in 2000-2001 re= tain corporate authors at the end of the title field. For comprehensive sea= rches, consider including terms and/or words searched in the title field [t= i]. MEDLINE articles are automatically indexed with MeSH terms using a well-ref= ined algorithm. Applying the MeSH vocabulary ensures that articles are unif= ormly indexed by subject, whatever the author's words. For more information= , see Frequently Asked Questions about Indexing for MEDLINE. The author keyword field (OT field) is searchable with the title/abstract [= tiab], text word [tw] and other term [ot] search tags. To retrieve all cita= tions that have keywords, use the query haskeyword. Other term data may dis= play an asterisk to indicate a major concept; however, you cannot search ot= her terms with a major concept tag. Includes all words and numbers in the title, abstract, other abstract, MeSH= terms, MeSH Subheadings, Publication Types, Substance Names, Personal Name= as Subject, Corporate Author, Secondary Source, Comment/Correction Notes, = and Other Terms (see Other Term [OT] above) typically non-MeSH subject term= s (keywords), including NASA Space Flight Mission, assigned by an organizat= ion other than NLM. Words and numbers included in a citation's title, collection title, abstrac= t, other abstract and author keywords (Other Term [ot] field). English lang= uage abstracts are taken directly from the published article. If an article= does not have a published abstract, NLM does not create one. The neighbors of a document are those documents in the database that are th= e most similar to it. The similarity between documents is measured by the w= ords they have in common, with some adjustment for document lengths. To car= ry out such a program, one must first define what a word is. For us, a word= is basically an unbroken string of letters and numerals with at least one = letter of the alphabet in it. Words end at hyphens, spaces, new lines, and = punctuation. The 132 common, but uninformative, words (also known as stopwo= rds) are eliminated from processing at this stage. Next, a limited amount o= f stemming of words is done, but no thesaurus is used in processing. Words = from the abstract of a document are classified as text words. Words from ti= tles are also classified as text words, but words from titles are added in = a second time to give them a small advantage in the local weighting scheme.= MeSH terms are placed in a third category, and a MeSH term with a subheadi= ng qualifier is entered twice, once without the qualifier and once with it.= If a MeSH term is starred (indicating a major concept in a document), the = star is ignored. These three categories of words (or phrases in the case of= MeSH) comprise the representation of a document. No other fields, such as = Author or Journal, enter into the calculations. f448fe82f3