tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-22763131.post2512938267962146368..comments2007-10-17T12:55:35.765ZComments on Liberating the literature: DesignsJon Brasseynoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-22763131.post-8851820171232612822007-10-17T12:55:00.000Z2007-10-17T12:55:00.000ZI’ve been thinking of a similar system for a while...I’ve been thinking of a similar system for a while and it makes sense for the specialisms. I’d also thought of using it when people do very broad searches e.g. asthma. You could then prompt them by saying “This is a broad search; you may want to refine it to ensure more focussed search results”.<BR/><BR/>I think the idea is definitely one for the future. As ever it’s a case of designing a robust system that will not cost too much and not take up too much of the screen!<BR/><BR/>With regard to letting people know where they are, I’m hoping we’ve got that ‘covered’. On the homepage they’ll be a big title above the search box and on the results page they’ll be the same title at the top of the search results. They’ll also be a clear button/link to change the specialism or return to the main TRIP.<BR/><BR/>Cheers<BR/><BR/>jonAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-22763131.post-1604952000106965372007-10-17T12:36:00.000Z2007-10-17T12:36:00.000Zthe mockup looks good. could you use a keyword sea...the mockup looks good. <BR/>could you use a keyword search on the search item the user inputs to automaticaly suggest a specialist TRIP?<BR/>i think it is very important to know in which part of TRIP you are right now (my experience from teachin pubmed tells, that people get confused when switching to a mesh-search and back to pubmed)<BR/>M.Martinhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13078597404766627102noreply@blogger.com