Are there indices/bibliographies or databases of foreign science papers in English?
Possible Duplicate:\
How To Find Old Russian Physics Papers In
English?
Foreign-language science papers are frequently difficult to come by in
translation. Is there any sort of index/bibliography or database that
could be used to find translations of specific papers, assuming they
exist? This could save a lot of time and expense for researchers when
they would otherwise be duplicating existing translation work.
- Alan Thomas II
Comments
- JoeHobbit: http://libraries.stackexchange.com/questions/691/how-to-find-foreign-science-papers-in-english/695#695
- Alan Thomas II: Based on the closed question at the above link. (Originally posted as an
edit to that question, then reverted and posted here.)
- KatieR: You don't get it. The question had an accepted answer. It is redundant
to repost the question. My comment was meant as a "learn from this and
dont repeat it" situation.
- Joe: @KatieR : if we get enough people with high enough reputation, we should
be able to re-open the earlier question (which, although was quite
specific, was answered in a generic enough way)
- Joe: This question is *not* the same as the earlier one -- as there are
many other ways to find foreign translations. It would be better to
re-open the earlier question, and if necessary, strip out the
specificity.
- KatieR: @Joe, the wording of the original question was completely changed by M.
Alan Thomas II, making this a duplicate of the original question. If he
had just left the first question alone and let it be closed and THEN
opened this one, things would have been fine. As a result, these are
duplicate questions.
- Ashley Nunn: @KatieR why do we need the closed one and this one? Why not just edit
the first one to make it less specific, and thus, on-topic?
- Joe: @KatieR : I see this as being a much narrower question than the original
(once you ignore the specific article they're looking for), as it asks
about 'index/bibliography or database'(s), vs. just finding a
translation ... but then it looses the specificity of it being a physics
paper (for which I'd have asked for help on
PAMNET)
- KatieR: Now that the original question has been restored, it would be
appropriate for the OP to reword this question to be a bit more broad
and more like the first, but without the specific article request. If I
could take back my vote to close, I would.
- Alan Thomas II: I submitted a reversion to OP's original version when I posted this
here; I was trying to avoid duplication, but my edits still need
approval. Since then, OP has re-worded his post to be appropriate and I
think it could be re-opened as-is. If so, I'll delete this as a
duplicate at that time.
- Anna Lear: @M.AlanThomasII The other question has been reopened, so I'm going to
close this one on your behalf.
Answer by cpikas
There was a World Translation Center and they had an index which used to
be on DIALOG, but might not be any longer.
SLA's PAM division has had several recent discussions see a summary
here:
http://pam.sla.org/2012/02/pamnet-monitor/
. See Dana Roth's column in the PAM Bulletin from August 2010 (p15)
http://pam.sla.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/aug10.pdf
for much more detailed information.
Indeed many Russian science articles have been translated and there are
translated journals. Some German articles have been translated, too.
Other languages not so much.
Comments
- Alan Thomas II: Anyone linked to this answer should also look at the original question
and full answer list at http://libraries.stackexchange.com/q/691/345