Feature Name: Enhanced Query Filtering
Write Clearly and Concisely: Use simple language and short sentences. Make sure each section is clear and understandable on its own. JUQ-275
Define Your Audience: Who will be using this guide? Tailoring the content to your audience's needs is essential. Are they technical users, end-users, administrators, or someone else? Feature Name: Enhanced Query Filtering Write Clearly and
Challenges and Future Directions
| Step | How to do it | Why it helps |
|------|--------------|--------------|
| 1. Verify the identifier | Check any internal documents, lab notebooks, or the source where you first saw “JUQ‑275.” Look for an alternative name (e.g., IUPAC name, CAS number, gene symbol, product code). | Many compounds are published under their systematic name rather than a project‑specific code. |
| 2. Search scholarly databases | • PubMed (for biomedical/chemical topics) – use the “All Fields” search.
• Web of Science or Scopus – broader coverage of chemistry, materials, and engineering journals.
• Google Scholar – includes pre‑prints, theses, and conference abstracts. | These databases index peer‑reviewed articles, pre‑prints, and patents. |
| 3. Include synonyms & related keywords | If you suspect JUJ‑275 is a kinase inhibitor, try searches like “JUQ‑275 AND kinase,” “JUQ‑275 AND cancer,” or the probable target class (e.g., “JAK inhibitor”). | A code name may only appear in the methods section; the abstract may reference the target class. |
| 4. Check pre‑print servers | bioRxiv, chemRxiv, arXiv, and Research Square often host the latest work before journal publication. | Early‑stage results are frequently shared here under project codes. |
| 5. Look for patents | Use Google Patents, the USPTO, or WIPO databases with “JUQ‑275” as a keyword. Patents often disclose detailed chemistry and biological data that are not yet published in journals. | Many novel compounds are first described in patent literature. |
| 6. Ask the community | Post a concise query on ResearchGate, Chemistry Stack Exchange, or a relevant LinkedIn group, mentioning the context (e.g., “I’m looking for publications on the small‑molecule JUQ‑275, a putative [target] inhibitor”). | Researchers who have worked with the same code may be able to point you to the correct citation. |
| 7. Use citation‑tracing tools | If you find a related paper (e.g., a review on a class of compounds that may include JUQ‑275), use “Cited by” or “Related articles” features to explore downstream work. | This can uncover later papers that finally reveal the code name. | List sources cited in the paper, formatted according