Skip to Main Content Skip to footer content

ENOL 110 - Grape and Wine Chemistry

Finding Scholarly Articles

1. Use Library Databases

The Library subscribes to many databases that have or link to scholarly articles

♦ Academic Search Ultimate indexes articles in magazines and newspapers as well as articles in scholarly journals.
  It lets you limit your search results to scholarly journals.

The discipline-specific databases (AGRICOLA, CAB Abstracts, CINAHL, FSTA, and BIOSIS) take a broader view of scholarly/professional literature and also index publications types such as dissertations, books and book chapters, conference proceedings, and technical reports.
These databases will allow you to limit your search results t o only scholarly journals.
 

2. Use Google Scholar

♦ Indexes a variety of publication types including scholarly journal articles.

♦ Does not have a way to limit results to only scholarly journals.

Did you get very little or too much from your search?
 

To get more

Use * for alternate word endings
        e.g.,   sustainab* retrieves sustainable, sustainability etc.

Use the different search lines to enter key words (not sentences) describing the different components of your search topic

Redo your search adding new keywords you find in article abstracts and subject terms given to the articles by the database

Use or between synonyms or alternate concepts
        e.g.,    greenhouse gases* or ghg* or carbon dioxide

Use fewer search terms. Each time you put in another search term (unless they are synonyms combined with or) you will get fewer results. Start with a small number of keywords and then add more terms or try different terms based on your results.
 

To get less

Use quotation marks around words you want searched as a phrase
e.g.,  "greenhouse gases"

Databases usually offer ways to Limit or Refine your search results, such as:
   To Scholarly/Peer-reviewed journals
   By publication date range
   To journal articles only (or books, dissertations, etc)

Some databases also have specific limits, such as:
   Methodology
   Age Groups
   Gender

Add more search terms:
    Each time you put in another search term, you will retrieve fewer results.
    Start with a small number of keywords and then add more terms or try different terms based on your results.
    Use the different search lines to enter more  key words (not sentences) describing the different components of your topic
    In the articles that are good, look for other for terms used in title, abstract, and subjects in that seem to focus on your interest