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Author

William Z. Nasri

Bio: William Z. Nasri is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cataloging & Union catalog. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 2 publications receiving 747 citations.

Papers
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Book
01 Jul 1971
TL;DR: "Names as Catalog Entries, A. M. Abdul Huq Nashville Public Libraries, David Marshall Stewart National Agricultural Library, Leila P. Moran National Archives (United States), James B. Myatt National Libraries (Translated by Rosalind Kent), Natalia Tyulina National Libraries Task Force",
Abstract: "Names as Catalog Entries, A. M. Abdul Huq Nashville Public Libraries, David Marshall Stewart National Agricultural Library, Leila P. Moran National Archives (United States), James B. Rhoads National Bibliography, Frank M. McGowan National Book Committee, John C. Frantz National Commission on Libraries and Information Science, Charles H. Stevens National Federation of Abstracting and Indexing Services, Stella Keenan National Federation of Abstracting and Indexing Services, Toni Carbo Bearman National Fire Protection Association, Charles S. Morgan National Lending Library for Science and Technology (British Library Lending Division), A. G. Myatt National Libraries (Translated by Rosalind Kent), Natalia Tyulina National Libraries Task Force, James P. Riley National Libraries Task Force, Marlene D. Morrisey National Library Week, Gloria Hastings National Library of Medicine: Catalogs and Cataloging Services, Emilie V. Wiggins The National Library of Medicine: Introduction and History, Robert B. Menhert National Reprographic Centre for Documentation (NRCd), B. J. S. Williams National Science Foundation---Science Information, Burton W. Adkinson National Science Library of Canada, Jack E. Brown National Union Catalog, John Phillip Immroth Natural Classification, Jay E. Daily Naude, Gabriel, Eric de Grolier Nebraska Library Association, Vivian A. Peterson Nebraska. University of Nebraska Libraries, Eugene M. Johnson Nepal, Libraries in, Narayan Mishra Nepal, Libraries in, Shanti Mishra The Netherlands, Libraries and Information Centers in, D. J. Maltha Networks, Cognitive, David G. Hays Neuroscience Information Resources, Edgar A. Bering, Jr. Nevada Library Association, Billie Mae Polson New England Deposit Library, Robert R. Walsh New England Document Conservation Center, George Martin Cunha New England Historic Genealogical Society New York Historical Society, Lawrence S. Thompson New England Library Association, Mary A. McKenzie New England Library Board, Walter Brahm New Hampshire Library Association, Louise C. Price New Mexico Library Association, Mary Jo Duck Walker New Mexico. The University of New Mexico Libraries, John F. Harvey New Orleans Public Library, Colin Bradfield Hamer, Jr. New York Library Association, Helen F. Rice New York Library Club, Joseph N. Whitten The New York Public Library, John Mackenzie Cory New York University Libraries, Carlton C. Rochell New York. State University College of Arts and Science, School of Library and Information Science Geneseo, Ivan L. Kaldor New York. State University of New York at Buffalo, School of Information and Library Studies, George S. Bobinski The New York Times, John Rothman New York. State University of New York at Stony Brook Libraries, Donald C. Cook New Zealand, Libraries in, H. de S. C. MacLean Newark Public Library, Julia Sabine The Newberry Library, Lawrence W. Towner Newcastle. University of Newcastle upon Tyne Library, B. J. Enright News Libraries and Collections, Geoffrey Whatmore Nicaragua, Libraries in, Eileen Bloch Nicholson, Edward Williams Byron, K. A. Manley Nigeria, Academic Libraries in, Khalil Mahmud "

743 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: ChEMBL is an Open Data database containing binding, functional and ADMET information for a large number of drug-like bioactive compounds to maximize their quality and utility across a wide range of chemical biology and drug-discovery research problems.
Abstract: ChEMBL is an Open Data database containing binding, functional and ADMET information for a large number of drug-like bioactive compounds. These data are manually abstracted from the primary published literature on a regular basis, then further curated and standardized to maximize their quality and utility across a wide range of chemical biology and drug-discovery research problems. Currently, the database contains 5.4 million bioactivity measurements for more than 1 million compounds and 5200 protein targets. Access is available through a web-based interface, data downloads and web services at: https://www.ebi.ac.uk/chembldb.

2,956 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide an introduction to geographical information technology along with an historical perspective on the evolving role of Geographic Information Systems (GIS) in planning, overview relevant methods and techniques for GIS-based land-use suitability mapping and modeling, and identify the trends, challenges and prospects of GISbased land use suitability analysis.

1,416 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results show that the effect of trust on intention to shop online is stronger for women than for men, and that online word-of-mouth quality affects online trust differently across genders.
Abstract: This paper focuses on the cultural effect of gender on the relationship of online word of mouth and trust in e-commerce. To encourage online commerce, many online retailers use online word-of-mouth systems, where consumers can rate products offered for sale. To date, how such ratings affect trust and adoption of e-commerce across genders has been relatively unexplored. We assess whether the effect of online trust on intention to shop online is moderated by gender. Our results show that the effect of trust on intention to shop online is stronger for women than for men. In addition, we find that men value their ability to post content online, whereas women value the responsive participation of other consumers to the content they have posted. Finally, we find that online word-of-mouth quality affects online trust differently across genders.

620 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The historical development of scientometrics, sources of citation data, citation metrics and the “laws” of scientometry, normalisation, journal impact factors and other journal metrics, visualising and mapping science, evaluation and policy, and future developments are considered.

560 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Investigating how engineers’ information-seeking practices intertwine looking for informing documents with looking for informed people finds that engineers search for documents to find people, search for people to get documents, and interact socially to get information without engaging in explicit searches.
Abstract: Engineers get most of their information from colleagues and internal reports. This study investigates how engineers’ information-seeking practices intertwine looking for informing documents with looking for informed people. Based on case studies in two product-development organisations we find that engineers search for documents to find people, search for people to get documents, and interact socially to get information without engaging in explicit searches. This intricate interplay between document and people sources can be explained by the nature of the design task. Many possible solutions are normally available to the designer and in choosing one over the others the designer must take into account a complex set of issues involving both the product as such and its context. However, design documentation seems to be biased toward technical aspects of the chosen solution, while information about the context of the design process is typically not available. Hence, people become a critical source of information because they can explain and argue about why specific decisions were made and what purpose is served by individual parts of the design. While document retrieval is a well-established field, this study concludes by briefly outlining how computer systems could support searches for people. Given the immense practical importance of searches for people there seems to be a large need for such systems and, consequently, for addressing the open research questions involved in designing them.

385 citations