VC Library Handbook

DATABASE SEARCH TECHNIQUES The following techniques will assist you in customizing and defining the search results.

Boolean Operators:

 “AND” Narrows the search and results in fewer articles retrieved by including articles that must contain both terms.

DOGS AND CATS

“O R”

Broadens the search and results in many articles retrieved by including results which contain either or both query terms.

DOGS OR CATS

 “NOT” Narrows the search and results in fewer articles by eliminating a term.

DOGS NOT CATS

An asterisk ( *) placed at the end of a word or root form of the word will prompt the database to search for all words that share the same root.

Truncation:

micro *

Example :

Matches microscope, microcomputer, etc.

Wildcards:

Wildcards substitute symbols for one or more letters, thus locating various spellings and forms of the word.

?

Stands for a single letter. Example: psych ???? y Matches either psychology or psychiatry

Quotation Marks:

Placing quotation marks around the search terms prompts the database to search for the phrase exactly as written without separating the words.

“ deficit spending ” The database will search for the terms “deficit spending” in the order specified without separating the terms.

Example:

Proximity Operators:

Proximity operators are used between two search terms to indicate that the terms must occur within a specified distance of each other. The W operator searches for word pairs in which the pair’s second term occurs within a specified number of words after the first.

W (within)

shared W 3 values

Matches any records in which the word values occurs three or fewer words after the word shared.

Example:

N (near)

The N operator specifies that the words on either side of the operator must occur within a specified number of words of each other in either direction for a record to match.

Example : deficit N 3 spending

Matches any records in which the words deficit and spending occur within three or fewer words of each other in either direction.

Field Codes:

Researchers may specify where they want the database to search for their search terms. Specifying a particular field (author, title, subject, abstract/summary) helps to focus or narrow the search. Select from a drop down menu or place two-letter codes in front of the search terms as follows:

su exercise and weight

Searches for articles with assigned subject headings of exercise and weight.

Example:

ti exercise

Searches for titles of articles that contain the word exercise

Example:

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