Finding preprints discussed in news stories

I spied with my self isolating eyethis story in the Observer (the Sunday edition of the Guardian).I decided to try to track down the preprints.  I have to say that tracking down published articles from details in a newspaper article has never, in my experience, been easy, but here goes.There are six:One from the Molecular Virology Research Group, University of Liverpool involving mice and with James Stewart as a possible author.One from the (Johan) Neyts lab at the University of Leuven, involving Syrian Hamsters.One submitted to Nature from the US, involving weight loss in mice.One from the University of Glasgow ' s Centre for Virus Research, about how Omicron enters the body.One from the University of Hong Kong, reporting less infection in the lungs.And one from Prof Ravi Gupta, University of Cambridge, involving blood samples from vaccinated patients.What about Googling it?  I come back to that.  But first, I have a link from the Omicron post on this blog to COVID related preprints in medRxiv and bioRxiv.  This shows you a list by date submitted, and now lists 21000 preprints, so is less useful to locate specific things.  The Observer do report that four of the six preprints have been published (their word) since Christmas Eve, but even so to find them in this chronological list (looking at the number submitted just on 1st January) may be rather tricky.UsingmedRxiv ' s advanced search and selecting bioRxiv and...
Source: Browsing - Category: Databases & Libraries Tags: COVID-19 Source Type: blogs