Index Medicus -national Library Of Medicine- Abbreviations For Journal Titles -

The breaking point came in the winter of 1959. A visiting professor from Heidelberg politely complained that the latest Index Medicus weighed four more pounds than the previous year’s edition. “It is not the knowledge that is heavy,” he said, “but the ink wasted on ‘Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine, Section on Experimental Pathology and Therapeutics.’”

The NLM knew they had a tiger by the tail. In 1963, with the advent of computerized indexing (the precursor to MEDLINE), they formalized the system into what became known as the . Every abbreviation had to be unique, reversible (you could reconstruct the original title from the abbreviation, mostly), and language-agnostic. English, French, German—all were flattened into a common, Roman-alphabet code. The breaking point came in the winter of 1959

Dr. Cairns found her asleep at her desk the next morning, cheek pressed against the cards. He read her list. Then he said, “This is either the most brilliant or most dangerous idea in bibliographic history.” In 1963, with the advent of computerized indexing