Updated article display and journal list
Since announcing the launch of a more modern PubMed Central (PMC) website in March 2022, NLM’s NCBI continues to make improvements based on your feedback. We invite you to preview the latest improvements planned for the PMC website. These improvements will become the default in October 2024 and include an updated article display, enhanced PMC journal list, and other features to help you access information quickly and easily. Click on the “Try it out now” link in the banner on the top of any ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc page to preview and experience these improvements for yourself.
Share Your Feedback
Let us know what you think and share your feedback using the yellow Feedback button located on the bottom of every PMC webpage. Your feedback is important as these improvements will become the default on the PMC website in October 2024.
What’s changing?
- Article Display:
- An updated look and feel of the page to improve readability.
- A streamlined citation display that more clearly indicates the date an article was first made available in print or electronic format, based on data provided to PMC. Other dates — such as submission, acceptance, and issue dates — can be viewed under the Article Notes section, which can be found under the article’s authors.
- Full article navigation is now provided in the right column, making it easier to jump to specific sections within the article and to find related article content, such as open peer review documents. The Associated Data section, which compiles related data content from an article, has been added to the article navigation menu.
- A direct link to the article on the publisher’s website in the Other Formats section has been added.
- PMC Journal List:
- The journal list now includes filters and updated labeling that make it easier to determine a journal’s archiving status, including which of its content are included in PMC and whether it is still depositing content to the archive.
- Each record in the journal list has a link to all articles in PMC from that journal—making it easier to navigate the nearly 10 million articles in PMC.
- The updated PMC website runs on a modern cloud architecture, increasing the stability of the website.
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Questions?
Please reach out to us if you have questions or would like to provide feedback.
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PubMed Central® (PMC) is a free full-text archive of biomedical and life sciences journal literature at the National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) National Library of Medicine (NLM). In keeping with NLM’s legislative mandate to collect and preserve the biomedical literature, PMC is part of the NLM collection, which also includes NLM’s extensive print and licensed electronic journal holdings and supports contemporary biomedical and health care research and practice as well as future scholarship. Learn more here.
Boa noite! Sou André Luiz Dias, psicólogo clínico CRP 12/13099 e estudo, há um ano, transtorno de humor. Foi através de uma postagem de um psiquiatra no Instagram que eu conheci a PMC. Eu estou muito satisfeito em aprender e estudar através de vocês. Parabéns pelas atualizações. Vou continuar sempre a acessar o site para aprender. Aliás, conhecimento salva! Abraço a todos!
Full and free PMC archive access to biomedical and life sciences journal literature by the National Institutes of Health’s National Library of Medicine ,is Un-paralal initiative. Please continue it make it grow.
Great
Sounds interesting
Pleased to hear that, interesting
Is this going to impact on Grateful Med? I’ve been trying to connect since like 2004. I put the filter on my phone line modem connection, but like nothing. I can’t even figure out if my mercurial diuretics have expired or not.
No, this will not affect Grateful Med as it has been gone a long long time, but thanks for remembering it (and phone line modems)!
Your contect number
I am excited about the upcoming improvements to PubMed Central (PMC) and hope to see a more user-friendly interface that makes it easier to access and navigate through research articles. I am looking forward to the potential enhancements to search functionality and the addition of new tools for researchers to analyze and collaborate on published works. As a frequent user of PubMed Central (PMC), I am eager to see the improvements that will streamline the submission process for authors and provide better integration with other research databases.
PubMed is an invaluable, reliable reference source, turned-to online for more than 20 years. Very much appreciated. Looking forward to the improvements as well.
My research on the nitrogen cycle and the sparing effects of alkaloids on non-essential amino acid requirements for the upcoming edition of my book, entitled, “The Green Earth: Plant Medicine and Natural Rights,” began in a dot-matrix session with Winifred Sewell, a founding PubMed librarians, for which I am eternally grateful.
Great article on Lupus. Thank You So Much. Kay 🇦🇺🦘🇦🇺🦘🇦🇺🇦🇺
Congrats on the roll-out today. I noticed that this URL pattern no longer works. Is this a bug or expected change? Is there a new URL pattern for article figure images?
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6365454/bin/fnins-13-00025-g0002.jpg
I see that it is first redirected to (note the shift of “pmc”):
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6365454/bin/fnins-13-00025-g0002.jpg
And then this URL returns a 404 🙁
Thanks for your feedback! We will look into this and get back to you. In the meantime, if you need assistance feel free to contact our help desk: https://support.nlm.nih.gov/support/create-case/