Effective Searching
Effective Searching
Introduction
It is very easy to find information in an
electronic database by typing in keywords.
What is not so easy is to find the BEST
information. This guide is intended to help
you to find the best information quickly.
Boolean Operators
Keywords
The keywords in the above topic are
violence, media and crime. You then
need to think of synonyms, that is words
with the same meaning. In this case:
Violence
media
crime
bloodthirsty
television
criminal
cruelty
film
offender
aggression
offence
Truncation
Many databases have what is called a
truncation symbol. This allows your
search to pick up the different endings of
words. In the Web of Science, OVID
databases (e.g. Medline, PsycINFO) and
the engineering Village database, (e.g. Ei
Compendex), the symbol used for
truncation is an * (asterisk). So a search
for manag* will find manager, manage,
managing, and management.
Wildcards
A wildcard is a symbol which can be used
to stand for any character. If ? is the
wildcard, then a search for wom?n will
find both woman and women. Not all
databases support this feature, and the
wildcard symbol is not always the ?. Use
the help facility of the database you are
using to find out if this feature is
supported, and what symbol is used.
Brackets
Brackets are used to tell the system which
order to process the operators in. The
search
Phrase searching
A phrase search is where the system looks
for two words adjacent to each other and
in that order, e.g. toxic waste will not find
waste which is toxic. To find a record
with this sentence in would require AND,
i.e toxic AND waste.
Narrowing a search
Broadening a search
If you get too few results you need to
broaden your search:
Use broader keywords e.g. structure
instead of building
Include additional keywords using OR,
e.g. violence OR aggression
Separate out phrases, e.g. toxic AND
waste instead of toxic waste. This looks
for the two words anywhere in the record,
not adjacent to each other, so finds more
hits, though they may be less relevant.
Help
All databases have help screens. Many
will have detailed documentation which
you can print out. This may be found
under help, under training, or under about
or perhaps as a database guide. Library
Services provide many of our own guides
at:
www.library.bham.ac.uk/searching/guides/
databaseguides.shtml
All Library Services documents are available in other formats, please contact Library
Services on 0121 414 5828 or www.library.bham.ac.uk/help/ask.shtml for information
SK.10 VJW - 23/08/2011