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It's not clear, however, just how much traction the new efforts, many of them just weeks old, are gaining. Given that volume, "People don't have time to read through entire articles and figure out what is the value added and the bottom line, and what are the limitations," says Kate Grabowski, an infectious disease epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins University's (JHU's) Bloomberg School of Public Health who is leading an effort to create a curated set of pandemic papers. And the urgency is growing: By one estimate, the COVID-19 literature published since January has reached more than 23,000 papers and is doubling every 20 days-among the biggest explosions of scientific literature ever. Backed by large technology firms and the White House, they are racing to create digital collections holding thousands of freely available papers that could be useful to ending the pandemic, and scrambling to build data-mining and search tools that can help researchers quickly find the information they seek.

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"It's impossible."Ī loose-knit army of data scientists, software developers, and journal publishers is pressing hard to change that. "I'm not keeping up," says Sheahan, who works at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. But there are just too many-more than 4000 alone last week.

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Timothy Sheahan, a virologist studying COVID-19, wishes he could keep pace with the growing torrent of new scientific papers about the disease and the novel coronavirus that causes it. Science' s COVID-19 reporting is supported by the Pulitzer Center.









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