ADS: The Next Generation Search Platform
Alberto Accomazzi, Michael J. Kurtz, Edwin A. Henneken, Roman Chyla,, James Luker, Carolyn S. Grant, Donna M. Thompson, Alexandra Holachek, Rahul, Dave, Stephen S. Murray

TL;DR
The paper describes major updates to the NASA Astrophysics Data System, including expanded full-text indexing, improved search capabilities, and new features for user collaboration and data linking, enhancing research accessibility and utility.
Contribution
It introduces a new high-performance search engine and expanded metadata integration, significantly improving ADS's search and data management functionalities.
Findings
Over 3.5 million papers indexed with full-text search
Citation coverage doubled to over 70 million citations
New features for collaboration and data linking implemented
Abstract
Four years after the last LISA meeting, the NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS) finds itself in the middle of major changes to the infrastructure and contents of its database. In this paper we highlight a number of features of great importance to librarians and discuss the additional functionality that we are currently developing. Starting in 2011, the ADS started to systematically collect, parse and index full-text documents for all the major publications in Physics and Astronomy as well as many smaller Astronomy journals and arXiv e-prints, for a total of over 3.5 million papers. Our citation coverage has doubled since 2010 and now consists of over 70 million citations. We are normalizing the affiliation information in our records and, in collaboration with the CfA library and NASA, we have started collecting and linking funding sources with papers in our system. At the same time, we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsScientific Computing and Data Management
