Publications World Map
Search by author name or ORCID and instantly map their publications around the globe.
Which author is correct?
We found papers with different affiliations for this author name. Pick the right one to filter results.
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Papers
| Title | Year | Journal | Authors | Affiliation | Keywords | Methods | Detected | All Countries | Level | Override | Visible |
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Publication Trends
Publications over time, grouped by year.
Top Journals
Most frequent journals across filtered publications.
International Collaborations
Papers with authors from multiple countries, ranked by strength.
Co-author Network
Who does this author collaborate with? Scroll to zoom, drag to pan.
Topics
Frequent keywords extracted from titles and abstracts.
Visualization
Customize map style, size, and preview your settings.
Map Settings
Map Preview
Methods
Filter papers by research methodology and manage method categories.
Method Categories
Manage Filters
Load, edit, rename, share, and delete your saved filters.
Your Saved Filters
PubMed Advanced Search
Build field-specific PubMed queries to track competitors, company papers, or research topics.
Query Builder
Select a field type from the dropdown, then type your search value in the text box next to it.
Quick Examples
Boolean Operators: Combining Your Search Terms
Boolean operators form the basis of mathematical sets and database logic. Using these terms to combine concepts and keywords will help you perform a transparent, reproducible, and thorough search.
Use AND to link ideas and concepts where you want to see both in your results. AND requires that every term be present, so it narrows the number of results.
"children" AND "poverty"
Use OR between similar keywords like synonyms, acronyms, and spelling variations within the same concept. OR broadens the search by returning results containing any of the terms.
"behavior" OR "behaviour"
Use NOT to exclude specific keywords. Be careful — you may miss important results. Any article that discusses both terms will be excluded entirely.
"pediatrics" NOT "adults"
Filtering Help: Truncation & Wildcards
Truncation
Truncation allows you to find multiple spelling variations of a keyword. The universal symbol is the asterisk (*). Used at the end of a root word, it returns variations from that point.
nurs* → nurse, nurses, nursing, nursed, nurse's, etc.
economic* → economic, economics, economical, economically, etc.
genetic* → genetic, genetics, genetically, etc.
Wildcards
A wildcard substitutes a symbol for a letter in a word, representing variations in spelling. Wildcards may vary by database and not every database allows wildcard searching.
wom!n → woman, women
colo?r → color, colour
behavio?r → behavior, behaviour
tumo*r → tumor, tumour
Combining with Boolean Operators
Use AND, OR, NOT and parentheses to build complex queries with truncation and wildcards.
Blood pressure AND (vehicle* OR traffic) AND (emissions OR particulates OR exhaust)