View source: R/core_articles_dedup.R
core_articles_dedup | R Documentation |
Article deduplication
core_articles_dedup( doi = NULL, title = NULL, year = NULL, description = NULL, fulltext = NULL, identifier = NULL, repositoryId = NULL, key = NULL, parse = TRUE, ... ) core_articles_dedup_( doi = NULL, title = NULL, year = NULL, description = NULL, fulltext = NULL, identifier = NULL, repositoryId = NULL, key = NULL, ... )
doi |
(character) the DOI for which the duplicates will be identified. optional |
title |
(character) title to match when looking for duplicate articles.
Either |
year |
(character) year the article was published. Only used in
combination with the value for |
description |
(character) abstract for an article based on which its
duplicates will be found. This should be more than 500 characters. Value
for the |
fulltext |
(character) Full text for an article based on which its duplicates will be found. optional |
identifier |
(character) CORE ID of the article for which the duplicates will be identified. optional |
repositoryId |
(character) Limit the duplicates search to particular repository id. optional |
key |
A CORE API key. Get one at
https://core.ac.uk/api-keys/register. Once you have the key,
you can pass it into this parameter, or as a much better option,
store your key as an environment variable with the name
|
parse |
(logical) Whether to parse to list ( |
... |
Curl options passed to |
https://core.ac.uk/docs/#!/articles/nearDuplicateArticles
## Not run: core_articles_dedup(title = "Managing exploratory innovation", year = 2010) core_articles_dedup_(title = "Managing exploratory innovation", year = 2010) ab = 'Neonicotinoid seed dressings have caused concern world-wide. We use large field experiments to assess the effects of neonicotinoid-treated crops on three bee species across three countries (Hungary, Germany, and the United Kingdom). Winter-sown oilseed rape was grown commercially with either seed coatings containing neonicotinoids (clothianidin or thiamethoxam) or no seed treatment (control). For honey bees, we found both negative (Hungary and United Kingdom) and positive (Germany) effects during crop flowering. In Hungary, negative effects on honey bees (associated with clothianidin) persisted over winter and resulted in smaller colonies in the following spring (24% declines). In wild bees (Bombus terrestris and Osmia bicornis), reproduction was negatively correlated with neonicotinoid residues. These findings point to neonicotinoids causing a reduced capacity of bee species to establish new populations in the year following exposure.' core_articles_dedup( title = "Country-specific effects of neonicotinoid pesticides on honey bees and wild bees", description = ab, verbose = TRUE) ## End(Not run)
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