If you suffer from "keyword search burnout," there are other methods for finding material. These methods should be regularly employed as part of your search process.
the general process of seeking out information. Such as searching for information on Google
A search strategy is an organized combination of keywords, phrases, subject headings, and limiters used to search a database.
Your search strategy will include:
keywords
boolean operators
variations of search terms (synonyms, suffixes)
subject headings
Your search strategy may include:
truncation (where applicable)
phrases (where applicable)
limiters (date, language, age, publication type, etc.)
A search strategy usually requires several iterations. You will need to test the strategy along the way to ensure that you are finding relevant articles. It's also a good idea to review your search strategy with your co-authors. They may have ideas about terms or concepts you may have missed.
Additionally, each database you search is developed differently. You will need to adjust your strategy for each database your search. For instance, Embase is a European database, many of the medical terms are slightly different than those used in MEDLINE and PubMed.
Reference Lists
One technique you can use to find more research on your topic is to look at the reference list of a resource. If they cite other researchers, there is an excellent chance they are on the same or similar subject matter.
Steps
Find one good article
Look at their references and find articles that look useful
Type the title of a resource into a library search to try and gain access to the full text.
ScienceDirect provides links to articles in the reference list for each paper.
Cited By
Another technique you can use to find more research on your topic is to find other resources which have cited a resource you found. If other researchers cited that resource, there is an excellent chance they are on the same or similar subject matter.
Google Scholar is one useful tool to conduct this type of research.
Steps:
For example:
Reminders
Search filters are used to limit search results.
Many databases feature built-in search filters commonly used to limit search results by age group, publication type, study type, and more.
If you use the filter rather than a keyword, you can guarantee that the resources returned are relevant to your topic.
Keywords search everywhere for the term, including full text (unless otherwise specified). The keyword may only appear once in the text of a paper rather than being a substantial aspect of the article. Whereas when you choose a specific category under a filter, that category will be a substantial aspect of the article.
For example, in a PubMed, the age filter.
Please see the pages for each database for more information about filters.
Searching in a database using different fields can be a powerful way to narrow your results. A field is a specific part of a record in a database.
When using the Advanced Search screen databases, look for drop-down boxes or menus to select the field you want to search.
Multiple fields may be combined using Boolean operators.
Using specific field codes in combination with other search techniques can produce more precise searches.
Below are a few of the most common field codes that will help make your searches more precise.
Title: Searches for the term in just the title
Subject Terms: Searches for the keywords in the subjects (click here for more information about subject terms).
Abstract: Searches through the abstract where available. Not all resources will have an abstract available, so many resources may be excluded when using this field.
Effective health searching requires precision and attention to detail, especially when navigating vast and complex databases.
One critical aspect of refining search strategies is the use of special characters to dramatically improve search accuracy and efficiency.
This page provides essential information on how to utilize various symbols, such as wildcards and truncation, to enhance your search results.
Phrase searching narrows your search results by allowing you to define precisely how you want the words to appear.
For example,
Then you are probably looking for those two words to appear next to each other, with no other words in between, in the document's text.
To ensure that the database searches this phrase correctly, you can put quotation marks around your search term and force the database to search it as a phrase.
For example,
If you click on the two examples, you should see when using the phrase searching methods that there are significantly fewer results when quotation marks are added.
with quotation marks
Be careful when you use phrase searching; if you put too many words in quotation marks, the database will likely not find any results. Only use phrase searching on established phrases—words that you can reasonably expect other authors to use.
In the health sciences, health conditions containing more than one word should always be added with quotation marks.
Another important note is about phrasing searches (when you enclose your keywords in quotation marks). While this can be useful, it can also limit your results.
For example, searching for "college students" or "university students" means the terms need to be in that exact order, which could make you miss useful results like:
Students enrolled in college
Students pursuing higher education
Students studying at college
Undergraduates at college
Undergraduates at university
College's student body
University participants
Instead, break the concepts about university and student out into separate keyword searches
For example:
("university" OR college OR "post-secondary" OR "higher education" OR undergrad OR undergraduate) AND (student).
Truncation is a technique that broadens your search to include various word endings.
Truncation is useful when one of your keywords has several endings, but all variations represent the same idea.
Using truncation will help you complete your search faster because you will not have to manually type in and search every variation of the word.
To truncate a search term, do a keyword search in a database, but remove the ending of the word and add the correct truncation symbol to the end of the word. The database will retrieve results that include every word that begins with the letters you entered.
For example,
child* = child, childs, children, childrens, childhood
Not all words are suited to truncation.
For example:
Take a look at our Effective Health Science Searching guide.
Starting research can be overwhelming, but if you think of it as a process from receiving your assignment to the writing stage, it may help.
It's not a straightforward journey and may require repeating steps.
To help visualize this journey, this guide is a series of stops in the process. You can work through the whole journey or jump to the stops you're interested in.