Publication Year: 1993
DOI: DOI not available
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Publication Year: 1983
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1086/467051
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Publication Year: 1989
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1086/416571
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Publication Year: 1994
DOI: DOI not available
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Publication Year: 1968
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1086/350398
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Publication Year: 2009
DOI: DOI not available
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Publication Year: 2010
DOI: DOI not available
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Publication Year: 2005
DOI: DOI not available
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Publication Year: 2009
DOI: DOI not available
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Publication Year: 2004
DOI: DOI not available
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Publication Year: 2015
DOI: https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.4073
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Publication Year: 2006
DOI: DOI not available
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Publication Year: 2018
DOI: DOI not available
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Publication Year: 1989
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1086/416356
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Publication Year: 2011
DOI: DOI not available
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Found 1974 results in 0.252 seconds
Including any of the words AND
, OR
, or NOT
in any of your searches will enable
boolean search. Those words must be UPPERCASE. You can use this in all searches, including using
the search parameter, and using search filters.
This allows you to craft complex queries using those boolean operators along with parentheses and quotation marks.
Surrounding a phrase with quotation marks will search for an exact match of that phrase, after stemming and
stop-word removal (be sure to use double quotation marks — "
). Using parentheses will specify order of
operations for the boolean operators. Words that are not separated by one of the boolean operators will be
interpreted as AND
.
Behind the scenes, the boolean search is using Elasticsearch's query string query on the searchable fields (such as
title, abstract, and fulltext for works; see each individual entity page for specifics about that entity). Wildcard
and fuzzy searches using *
, ?
or ~
are not allowed; these characters will be
removed from any searches. These searches, even when using quotation marks, will go through the same cleaning as
described above, including stemming and removal of stop words.
Search for works that mention "elmo"
and "sesame street"
, but not the words
"cookie"
or "monster"
:
"elmo" AND "sesame street" NOT "cookie" NOT "monster"