Consider what type of information you need and where you might find it.
Break your topic into key concepts and identify terms for each concept. Start with fewer words. Less yields more.
Don't be too narrow in your search, especially initially.
While it is possible to find sources on international or local topics, the strength of many of our academic databases is coverage of US national topics.
Use Boolean connectors like AND, OR, and NOT to connect keywords. Many databases search the words as a phrase otherwise.
In general, avoid using prepositions like "in," "of," and "on."
Truncation characters such as an * (asterisk) can expand your search by retrieving various forms of a word, e.g., comput* retrieves computer, computers, computing, computation, etc.
Look at the subject terms or descriptors that are used for articles that appear relevant. Try other searches using those terms.
In the sciences and social sciences, when starting a journal article search on a topic, consider adding systematic review or meta-analysis, or literature review in your search.
Consult a librarian or your faculty member for additional related terms.
Think about which individuals or groups of people or organizations are associated with your topic. These might be additional terms to search.
Evaluate Article Relevance & Quality
Look at subject terms applied to relevant articles. Did you find additional articles by searching these subject headings?
Which terms or search strategies yielded the best results?
Look at the abstract. Are there additional keyword terms you might search?
How long is the article?
In which journal or periodical was this article published? What is the journal's or magazine's reputation? How do you know?
When was the article published? What time period does the research or article cover?
Who is the author of the article? What are the author's credentials? What qualifies the author as an expert?
What sources are cited in this article?
How will this source advance the research project?
Covers health care topics. Includes journal and news publications, reference books, pamphlets, and hundreds of videos demonstrating medical procedures and live surgeries. Offers a visual Topic Finder. Geared toward students.
Comprises more than 30 million citations for biomedical literature from MEDLINE, life science journals, and online books. Citations may include links to full-text content from PubMed Central and publisher websites.
Note: only abstracts and open-access articles are available through this resource.
Provides contextual information significant science topics. Includes reference works such as encyclopedias, articles from academic and news publications, experiments and simulations, and multimedia such as audio, images, and videos.
Includes full-text journals, and some open-access items, focusing mainly on the physical, life sciences, and social sciences. This subscription also includes titles to support counseling and psychology.
Journals List
Looking for a specific journal, magazine, or newspaper?
Use Journals List to search for the title of a journal, magazines, or newspaper and determine if the library offers online access or print access to that publication.