That's not the article I retrieved metadata for
I'm having a rather strange issue: twice now, with two completely unrelated PDFs, I have loaded these PDFs into Zotero and then used the Retrieve PDF Metadata function to look them up on Google Scholar, but instead of getting the correct information or a "no matches" result, the function has found a match in the article "The Jukes in 1915" by A. H Estabrook from the College of Law Faculty Publications 2009. Both of these PDFs were of books published in the 1800s. I'm really stumped--how do two different PDFs both result in the same wrong result?
RecogizePDF: Query string
followed by this line, which is probably similar in the two cases.I am unable to drag the child out of the parent if it is still in Unfiled Items.
I have all of my PDFs in Unfiled Items. I right click on one, "Retrieve metadata for PDF". If it finds the correct metada, I drag the result to a collection. If it finds the wrong metadata, it will not let me drag the child out of the parent in Unfiled Items. If I move the parent to a collection first, then I can drag the child out of it.
This is getting off-topic, though.
In any case, if the Jukes of 1915 start showing up again, I'll post URLs. Consider it an intermittent problem at worst for now.
http://www.2shared.com/document/HByyNRI5/allman_homology_tunicata_polyz.html
BTW sixdeaftaxis, it might be a bad idea to retrieve the metadata for "several dozen" PDFs at once, because Google Scholar might kick you out if it thinks you're making automated requests. Although, I only use the function on one PDF at a time and I still get the Jukes error.
"the lawsof" "assumes the heart as indicating the dorsal aspect of the" "cephalic ganglion, however, in those inferior members of the animal" "in which the"
and doesn't find a match. (because the space gets lost - otherwise this would work and be the only hit). So far that's too bad, but OK. But then it looks for
"and ventral"
which of course gets a gazillion hits and the Sesak piece is first. Whatever makes Zotero pick that second attempted string is probably not a good idea.
OCR on this text was performed with Acrobat's built-in OCR tool, with German as the language setting. Once it was loaded into Zotero, I indexed it and then ran Retrieve PDF Metadata and got The Jukes in 1915.
http://www.2shared.com/document/n0VLz9fw/gore_1825_blumenbach.html
Very similar story here, but English (US) as the language this time. (This file is very large; ~383MB.)
The first page of text in all google books pdfs is the google books statement. And the words that Zotero picks from that statement just happen to bring up The Jukes in 1915 as the first hit
nothing to be done about that right now, but I think it's worth adding an exemption in the code for that given the prominence of google books and the fact that it's always the same page.