Sciencemadness Discussion Board

Does anyone has an access to SciFinder to help in something?

Knowledge Seeker - 17-1-2022 at 00:48

Hello
I need some help to search for some information on Scifinder. So if anyone can help me please send me a message.
Thank you

Dr.Bob - 20-1-2022 at 08:30

There is a place in references for those requests, you might want to ask for access to it. Or at least state what you are looking for, as some requests are much easier than others.

jarodduesing - 6-2-2022 at 04:06

Hi Bob, are you referring to on scifinder or a forum specific resource? I searched on both and wasn't able to find this.

Metacelsus - 6-2-2022 at 04:17

https://www.sciencemadness.org/whisper/viewthread.php?tid=28...

You may need to request access.

Dr.Bob - 6-2-2022 at 14:03

The last thread in special topics on Sciencemadness forum is references. You can email texium or others to get access.

Colleen Ortiz - 1-3-2022 at 03:14

SciFinder is a curated collection of chemical and bibliographic information from the Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS) that spans numerous scientific and medicinal domains, with a focus on chemistry. SciFinder was first introduced as a desktop software tool in 1995, and the online version was released in 2008. Researchers connected with pharmaceutical firms, universities, and other health sciences institutions are among SciFinder's target audience, according to CAS. For literature searches and background information on chemicals, medications, and substances, SciFinder is a good resource to use. SciFinder has a wide range of information, from journal articles to chemical structures, characteristics, and reactions. In SciFinder, there are three different search sections: references, compounds, and reactions. The reference search portion of SciFinder allows you to sort results by publication date, author name, and title. An astounding range of filters, organized into three tabbed sections: analyze, refine, and categorize, can also limit the results.
SciFinder provides MEDLINE records, citing reference features and chemical compound information that users may find for free through National Library of Medicine resources.

Texium - 1-3-2022 at 07:22

Quote: Originally posted by Colleen Ortiz  
SciFinder is a curated collection of chemical and bibliographic information from the Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS) that spans numerous scientific and medicinal domains, with a focus on chemistry. SciFinder was first introduced as a desktop software tool in 1995, and the online version was released in 2008. Researchers connected with pharmaceutical firms, universities, and other health sciences institutions are among SciFinder's target audience, according to CAS. For literature searches and background information on chemicals, medications, and substances, SciFinder is a good resource to use. SciFinder has a wide range of information, from journal articles to chemical structures, characteristics, and reactions. In SciFinder, there are three different search sections: references, compounds, and reactions. The reference search portion of SciFinder allows you to sort results by publication date, author name, and title. An astounding range of filters, organized into three tabbed sections: analyze, refine, and categorize, can also limit the results.
SciFinder provides MEDLINE records, citing reference features and chemical compound information that users may find for free through National Library of Medicine resources.
And here goes this account making another post that sounds like it was practically ripped from Wikipedia. Unless you can defend yourself in a way that sounds reliably human and explain why you keep posting crap like this, you’re banned.

DraconicAcid - 1-3-2022 at 23:51

Quote: Originally posted by Texium  
Quote: Originally posted by Colleen Ortiz  
SciFinder is a curated collection of chemical and bibliographic information from the Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS) that spans numerous scientific and medicinal domains, with a focus on chemistry. SciFinder was first introduced as a desktop software tool in 1995, and the online version was released in 2008. Researchers connected with pharmaceutical firms, universities, and other health sciences institutions are among SciFinder's target audience, according to CAS. For literature searches and background information on chemicals, medications, and substances, SciFinder is a good resource to use. SciFinder has a wide range of information, from journal articles to chemical structures, characteristics, and reactions. In SciFinder, there are three different search sections: references, compounds, and reactions. The reference search portion of SciFinder allows you to sort results by publication date, author name, and title. An astounding range of filters, organized into three tabbed sections: analyze, refine, and categorize, can also limit the results.
SciFinder provides MEDLINE records, citing reference features and chemical compound information that users may find for free through National Library of Medicine resources.
And here goes this account making another post that sounds like it was practically ripped from Wikipedia. Unless you can defend yourself in a way that sounds reliably human and explain why you keep posting crap like this, you’re banned.


I don't think this user is going to defend themselves in any way.