PaperChase. Self-service bibliographic retrieval.

TitlePaperChase. Self-service bibliographic retrieval.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1983
AuthorsHorowitz GL, Jackson JD, Bleich HL
JournalJAMA
Volume250
Issue18
Pagination2494-9
Date Published1983 Nov 11
ISSN0098-7484
KeywordsBoston, Consumer Behavior, Hospitals, Teaching, Libraries, Hospital, MEDLARS, National Library of Medicine (U.S.), Online Systems, Software, United States
Abstract

During the past three years, from terminals within Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, 3,654 persons used a computer program called PaperChase to search the medical literature. While performing 39,022 searches, these persons had 1,976,421 references displayed and selected 449,690 of them for printing. Throughout this period, the program underwent continual modification. Each year the number of searches increased--from 10,678 to 11,541 to 16,803. Each year the percentage of new users who were unsuccessful decreased--from 16 to 13 to 11. By the end of the third year, 549 people had completed 20 or more searches. PaperChase enables people to search the medical literature themselves, and thus provides a new experience in computerized bibliographic retrieval. When made available without charge in a teaching hospital, PaperChase is widely used.

DOI10.1001/jama.250.18.2494
Alternate JournalJAMA
PubMed ID6355532
Grant ListLM 03123 / LM / NLM NIH HHS / United States