Thanks!

It exists in the land of no-discernable license, being an independent passion 
project. The code however can be found at 
https://github.com/esperr/search-workbench. 

It's an elaboration of a couple of other projects I presented at Code4LibSE a 
few months ago -- basically a framework that ties together Google charts, 
venn.js (https://github.com/benfred/venn.js/) and the awesome NCBI API 
(https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/home/develop/api/).


Edwin V. Sperr, MLIS, AHIP
AU/UGA Medical Partnership
Office of Graduate Medical Education
Clinical Information Librarian
 
St. Mary’s Hospital
1230 Baxter Street
Athens, GA 30606
 
p: 706-389-3864
e: [email protected] | [email protected]
w: medicalpartnership.usg.edu

-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jonathan 
Rochkind
Sent: Thursday, September 28, 2017 11:07 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Announcing Search Workbench

This is pretty neat!  Is the code open source, and what language is it written 
in?  I'm intrigued by expanding to other search APIs with suitable 
functionality.

On Thu, Sep 28, 2017 at 11:02 AM, EDWIN VINCENT SPERR <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Search Workbench ( https://searchworkbench.info ) is a stab at using 
> interactive visualizations to assist in the process of constructing 
> and refining a search against a very large citation database.
>
> I hope it's useful for folks who do PubMed searching and think it 
> might also serve as a proof-of-concept for using visualizations in 
> other search applications...
>
>
> Edwin V. Sperr, MLIS, AHIP
> AU/UGA Medical Partnership
> Office of Graduate Medical Education
> Clinical Information Librarian
>
> St. Mary's Hospital
> 1230 Baxter Street
> Athens, GA 30606
>
> p: 706-389-3864
> e: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> | 
> [email protected]<mailto:espe [email protected]>
> w: medicalpartnership.usg.edu<http://www.medicalpartnership.usg.edu/>
>

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