Published: September 18, 2008
Science.gov 5.0 Debuts with Deep Web Technologies' New Search Interface
SANTA FE, N.M., Sept. 18 /PRNewswire/ -- The Science.gov Alliance,
consisting of representatives from 13 federal government science agencies, has
launched the 5.0 version of Science.gov (http://www.science.gov), its
acclaimed US scientific research site. Chief among the new features is an
upgraded federated search interface developed by Deep Web Technologies which
includes "smart" clustering, a science news feed and an encyclopedia sidebar
from Wikipedia that provide a context for the "science attentive" citizen and
other researchers.
"Just as science advances only if knowledge is shared, science is
accelerated if shared faster and better," said Dr. Walter Warnick, the
Director of the U.S. DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information, who
conceived of Science.gov. "Sharing science knowledge faster and better is
precisely what Science.gov 5.0 does. It allows anyone with Internet access to
easily search the results of the government's huge research and development
program - via a single query, and it returns results in relevance rank order.
Built on an advanced federated search architecture, Science.gov 5.0 is a
milestone for the acceleration of science."
Science.gov 5.0's upgraded interface includes Deep Web Technologies
Explorit Research Accelerator's "smart clustering," unique relevance-ranked
clusters that allow the user to see the most prevalent topics in the results.
It also retrieves and displays entries from Wikipedia that relate to the
user's search. The results screen delivers relevance-ranked search results in
the center, complemented by clusters that assist in visually navigating
results in the left side-bar and links to supporting content on the right
side-bar.
"With this new interface, we're creating a richer user experience and
taking a deeper dive into scientific data," said Abe Lederman, founder and CTO
of Deep Web Technologies. "We provide one-stop access to high-quality research
that lives in the 'deep web,' research that users would not easily obtain -
whether they're scientists or science buffs."
The breadth of information scanned and retrieved has expanded
significantly in 5.0. It searches a number of sources from the DOE Science
Accelerator such as DOepatents and DOE R&D Accomplishments. Also searched is
the E-print Network, a large, federated search application developed by Deep
Web Technologies. As a result, one search of the E-print Network
(http://www.osti.gov/eprints/) in Science.gov creates a cascading effect of
searches within searches, delivering results users might never have uncovered.
Deep Web Technologies' Explorit Research Accelerator has powered
Science.gov since its groundbreaking launch five years ago. Using Deep Web
Technologies' federated search engine, Science.gov created a single gateway to
the scientific information output of most of the Federal government.
Science.gov now federates 200 million pages of authoritative information,
including research and development results. Science.gov is alsothe United
States information contribution to WorldWideScience.org, a global scientific
research portal.
To learn more about Deep Web Technologies and its Explorit Research
Accelerator, visit http://www.deepwebtech.com.
About Deep Web Technologies
Deep Web Technologies (http://www.deepwebtech.com) creates custom,
sophisticated federated search solutions for clients who demand precise,
accurate results. Founded by industry thought-leader and "deep web" pioneer
Abe Lederman, Deep Web Technologies created the powerful Explorit Research
Accelerator, software that searches, retrieves, aggregates and analyzes
content from deep web databases - data that is inaccessible to general search
engines. Serving Fortune 500 companies, the Science.gov Alliance, the U.S.
Department of Energy, the Defense Technical Information Center, scitopia.org,
WorldwideScience.org and a variety of research and library alliances, Deep Web
Technologies has built a reputation as the "researcher's choice" for its
advanced, agile information discovery tools.
Deep Web Technologies is based inSanta Fe, New Mexico, where it has
earned four Flying 40 Awards as one of the fastest growing high-tech
companies.
Media contact:
Darcy Pedersen
darcy@deepwebtech.com or 505-820-0301 x233
This release was issued through eReleases(TM). For more information, visit
http://www.ereleases.com.
SOURCE Deep Web Technologies, Inc.
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