The SpringerLink Online Journal collection
includes more than 1,200 peer-reviewed journals, comprising more
than 600,000 individual documents. Most titles include complete back
issues to 1996, with digital conversion of all back issues under
way, making every title available from Volume I, Issue I.
Content
All articles
are organized by subject into 12 Online Libraries spanning medicine
and the sciences:
• Behavioral
Science
• Biomedical and Life
Sciences
• Business and Economics
• Chemistry and Materials Science
• Chinese Library of Science
• Computer Science
• Earth and Environmental Science
• Engineering
•
Humanities, Social Sciences and Law
• Mathematics
•
Medicine
• Physics and Astronomy
• Russian Library of Science
SpringerLink Features
Online First™
This
innovation in research publishing permits access to peer-reviewed
articles well before print publication. Article text is searchable,
and citable by Digital Object Identifier (DOI). Online FirstTM
significantly accelerates the circulation of critical discoveries in
interested research communities.
Reference Linking
Users
can expand their research with the reference linking found within
articles in SpringerLink. By clicking on references within the
articles, researchers are taken to other articles and titles
providing them with expanded information for their research.
Electronic supplementary Materials
transcend the print journal
Many titles in SpringerLink offer
electronic supplementary materials such as color images,
simulations, video and sound, so researchers not only read about the
research in the article, but can see, and often hear the research as
it happens.
Springer Online Journal
Archives
Springer is expanding the services it offers by
providing an Online Journals Archive that allows complete electronic
access to all English- language scientific articles published before
1997-- from Volume 1, Issue 1 onward. Starting in 2005, these past
issues will successively be made available in various subject area
packages via the online platform SpringerLink. Scientists and
researchers will be able to electronically access the complete
knowledge of more than a
century.