Ask HN: Where do you get your scientific papers from?
Given the recent hubbub about ACM's money-seeking ways, I'm wondering where HN members get their scientific research papers from?
I'm currently both an IEEE and ACM member; I find the IEEE digital library to be somewhat of a joke - ACM is much better in comparison, but still lacking.
I don't like putting 100 bucks in a million different organizations in order to be able to search for science (which should be open to all!) so this begs the question: what's the most cost-efficient method of obtaining scientific papers for research? Also, what resource has the best search engine for said papers (both ACM's and IEEE's engines suck)?
Thanks!
20 comments
[ 1.5 ms ] story [ 56.7 ms ] threadI'm very much dependent on university journal subscriptions to get full text articles - mostly from sciencedirect. It's a shame, as it puts so much stuff out of reach if you're not in the same position.
I think in the CS and math fields arxiv can be very useful, but papers in my field (mostly CFD related) are fairly sparse.
It might be worth seeing if you can still get access from your university, even if you no longer attend or are affiliated/employed. I know mine offers library services to students after graduation (for life I think), which I assume includes access to journals.
My usual approach to finding papers in a new area of interest is to google around until I find a Wikipedia article that looks like a good starting point. I have found Wikipedia itself to be pretty hopeless for searches. In the article or some of those that it links to, I usually find researchers working in my area of interest. Of particular value are survey articles because of the large number of references. Then I follow the authors to their research departments and projects and co-workers. That usually provides a week of reading.
If I'm looking for something serendipitous I read the comments here and follow the links.
Try searching on the ACM Digital Library. When you find a title, Google for it (doesn't even need to be Scholar), and you'll often find the author's copy on their webpage.
So far it only replaces the link on portal.acm.org with a google scholar search. Contributions beyond this are welcome.
I ssh one of the computers on campus. cd to my public_html directory and use elinks to download the pdf.
I think many people do this trick because I keep finding good papers in various ~username/ folders indexed by google.
1. Google scholar
2. Authors' personal websites
3. EBSCO Academic Alumni Edition via my alma matter's alumni association
4. Email requests to friends who are currently enrolled at major universities
5. Visits to the local university (Minnesota) library, which offers terminals for free public access to journals
Once that stops working I guess my next approach would be to mail a friendly request to one of my friends still in the academic world and have them download the pdf for me.
In California at least, you can also get pdfs of papers at most UC and CSU libraries without being a student. Stanford too, last time I tried. Of course this means you do actually have to physically go to the library in most cases.