Search for a (good) Bioscience search engine
I quite frequently come across blog posts on Medical/ Bioscience 2.0, some of which I have been bookmarking on del.ici.ous or on my personal “To try” folder for later use. With growing number, it has become difficult to track and organize them. I’ve always thought of making a blog post listing all my favorite ones together for my personal reference. Well that seems a daunting task. So, I’m listing some vertical bio search engines to start with.
Though there is a growing number of vertical search engine catering the needs of health science field, but I find that the number is relatively less for biosciences like biotechnology, molecular biology etc., considering the huge community of scientists and students in the field. Most of the old ones are either closed or outdated or simply not impressive enough (Duh! Do I need to provide the link when most of the links are not even working?). I mostly use Google and del.icio.us for my requirements, but I’m on always on a look-out for a decided bio search engine, good enough to make me stick to it for a long time..
Here’s a small collection of few links to vertical search engines in the field of biosciences, which can be used to get more specific hits than broad-based engines like Google.
BioHunt Molecular Biology finder

The database has been automatically created by the Marvin molecular biology sites retrieval robot. Some non relevant documents may sometimes appear.

Though this is a health science search section of Kosmix, I found that it gives relevant and well-organized info for bio terms too. To be precise – it instantly creates a homepage for the searched term. Saw this on the “About us” page of the site:
Every organization has a home page on the Web today.
Every user can have a home page on the Web today.
Why not every topic?
At Kosmix, that is what we are all about.
Our focus and passion is simple…
“Build the Unofficial Home Page for Every Topic on the Web”
A starting point for you to explore any topic on the Web
Kosmic review from Mashable:
Kosmix will be powering search for Revolution Health, in order to bring more relevant and up-to-date information regarding treatments, medical conditions and other health-related topics. The goal is to provide better search results than those you’d get from a general web search, and aims to give more targeted content with site-specific resources including articles and clinical trials. This is another example of how online communities can benefit from niche search engines that are more in line with what the end user needs.

This is a promising project from University of Berkeley (recently published) to develop a flexible, efficient, platform-independent database system infrastructure tailored to the search needs of bioscientists. Their goal is impressive, and I believe that this is what exactly a bioresearcher/ scientist has been wishing for.
- Continuously updated database of articles.
- Systematic integration of synonym matching and normalization.
- Systematic integration with community-accepted lexical ontologies.
- Entity tagging (e.g., protein/gene, receptor, ligand, etc. ).
- Relationship tagging (e.g., treatment-for, binds-to, mutation-of, create-bond, etc).
- “Slicing and dicing’’ subsets of the collection.
- Customization of search setup.
- Flexible, intuitive user interface.
Click here for a detailed description here.

Nextbio is the latest one, which I first saw on Scienceroll and appears to be quite useful. This explains it all:
NextBio is a web-based scientific data search engine that offers instant access, search and collaboration across a vast repository of life sciences information. Our query interface makes it easy to ask questions about genes, pathways, study results, disease areas, compound treatments and biomarkers, just to name a few.
It claims to have the largest knowledge base of genomics, proteomics and other specially processed biological, chemical and clinical experimental study results. Another important feature is it also enables researchers and clinicians to import and store their own data to find new insights. You can view a demo here.
Apart from being a life sciences data search engine, it is a community data sharing platform, providing the web 2.0 paradigm of instant access, user-generated content and collaboration to life scientists and clinicians worldwide. It is rapidly gaining popularity with users in over 60 academic institutes and pharmaceutical/ biotechnology companies.
It recently announced its closing of a $7M Series B funding led by Newbury Ventures. The new funds will be used for the further expansion of the search engine. (via)
If you are bored of all these, try searching me and my network on Lijit.
Talking about trust factor as mentioned in bbgm blog, if not me, you can trust my network for relevancy .
Well Seriously speaking, I found it cool and will put up the widget on side bar soon.





[...] Original post by http://zoisci.wordpress.com/2007/07/14/search-for-an-efficient-bioscience-search-engines/ [...]
» Search for a (good) Bioscience search engine
July 15, 2007 at 12:19 am
Great post. Kosmix is not an engine I was familiar with. Good to see you using Lijit as well
Deepak
July 15, 2007 at 2:55 am
Hi,
Along with a team of scientists we have developed another vertical search engine on life science.
The life science search engine is:
http://www.brij.in/
It searches for only about six thousand websites on life science , and the results can be further refined on labels. Basically it is a customized search engine of Google, but a lot of efforts have been done in ranking, and including and excluding sites on keywords.
Brij
Brij
July 19, 2007 at 1:33 pm
Thanks Brij for informing!! Will certainly try out. Sorry for the extremely late response. Not getting much “quality” online time
Daiz
August 15, 2007 at 3:07 pm
Just wanted to mention a free (web2.0ish?) medical dictionary visualization tool we developed:
Visual Medical Dictionary
http://www.curehunter.com/public/dictionary.do
It goes beyond regular dictionaries by displaying an ontology context tree (MeSH based) and interactive network graph of related drugs, diseases and therapies.
For example: a search for “psoriasis” will show a strong relationship with “Cyclosporine” and “Phototherapy” among other drugs and therapies.
Please check it out if you get a chance.
(sorry for the blatant pr)
Visual Medical Dictionary
August 30, 2007 at 4:00 am
Thanks for an informative post. I have added your blog to my blogroll.
Cheers,
Creaky15
creaky15
September 6, 2007 at 4:07 pm
I have found another search engine for bioscience. Pls try it out…
http://www.bioscience.ws/search/
-jax
jax
March 6, 2008 at 4:29 am