Who are we?
Cambridge Journals Online (CJO)
http://www.journals.cambridge.org
About CJO
All visitors to the site can
Read tables of contents and abstracts for all Cambridge journals
Search the full-text of articles
Keep up-to-date with the latest research in their field by receiving RSS/Atom news feeds
Registered users can also
Receive email alerts as soon as new journal issues go online
Read free sample issues
Keep track of new articles published in their favourite journals or in their fields of interest
Save links to favourite journals and articles
Save searches that they can either run again at a later date or have the results emailed to them
Buy online access to single articles using their credit card
Download citations
About CJO
Subscribers can also
Access the full text of journals
Link directly to cited journals using CrossRef and Medline (for those journals that are available in HTML)
Account Administrators can also
Download usage statistics
Activate subscriptions
Set up access for authorised remote users
Configure their IP domain
Add their organisation’s logo and their own message that will appear on
their users’ CJO homepages
Have you registered?
Registration Form
Advantages of Registration
Content alerts
Free issues
Save searches and bookmarks
Pay-per-view
Register
Browse Journals
Browse Journals By title
Browse Journals By title
Access to Abstract and Full Text
Advanced Search
Select the journals and/or subjects
you wish to search across. To select
more than one item at a time, hold
down the Ctrl key (PC) or Apple
key (Macintosh)
Advanced Search
Enter your key words or search strings to search
Restrict search by date range Restrict search to specific article type
Select the fields to be included in your search results
Search results (Abstract & Full Text)
CrossRef search
Users carry out searches using the familiar Google interface but the
results are limited to the scholarly research content provided by
participating publishers
About RSS and Atom feeds
What are RSS and Atom feeds?
RSS and Atom news feeds are computer-
readable files that summaries new content as it appears on a website
(RSS and Atom are just two different formats that do basically the same thing.)
Each feed includes a heading, a brief
description of the new content and a link
through to the website
Advantages of News feeds
RSS and Atom feeds
Stay in touch with new publishing
News feeds are a very convenient way of keeping up-to-date with a large number of websites. RSS and Atom feeds from Cambridge Journals Online will alert you to new journal issues and articles as soon as they are published online
Syndicating’ content