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Choosing
Subjects, Keywords, or Phrases to Search
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Keywords
- Keyword searching is a great place to start with your research on
a topic. Keywords are determined by you, unique to your topic, should
be as close to the main topic as possible, and can include obscure or
recently coined phrases. Keyword searching is great when you want to
combine several subjects.
- Keyword searches look through many fields--title, author, notes, subject,
etc.--to locate material records that mention your search term(s).
- You can truncate your search--locate multiple forms of a
word--by adding a * to the end of the root word. Search results will
include any applicable variation of your search term. (ie. depress*,
teen*)
Choosing the right keywords
can be a tough proposition: the easiest way to choose keywords is by taking
your topic and forming its main points into a question.
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photo
courtesy of: http://www.purewellness.org/psm.html |
| Topic Question: Should insurance pay
for homeopathic remedies? |
Topic Words: |
Related Words: |
homeopathic remedies |
homeopathy, homeopathic
medicine, alternative medicine, homeopath*
(narrow aspects
could include:
acupuncture,
massage, herbal medicine)
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| insurance |
coverage, health insurance, insurance
policy |
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Note that these words are all
nouns. Nouns make some of the best keyword searches.
Phrases
- Once you have a satisfactory list of keywords to search, an effective
way of narrowing your search to a manageable number of relevant results
is to combine those keywords into a phrase or "search string."
- Using a search string is great with you can't express your search
topic in a single word.
- One way to search for a specific phrase is to enclose the words with
quotation marks. This tells the index to search for those specific words
in order, together. ie. "homeopathic remedies"
- If you want to search for a longer phrase with more than two keywords,
you can create search strings by adding Boolean search
terms such as AND, OR, or NOT.
AND.
Placing the word
and between two or more keywords
narrows your search. And
tells the catalog or database to retrieve materials
whose records contain all of
the keywords you enter.
- A search of "homeopathic remedies" AND
insurance finds items that contain both
terms.
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OR.
Placing or
between your keywords broadens your search,
and brings back materials whose records contain at least one of
the keywords you enter. Beware: the relevancy of results may decrease.
- A search of "homeopathic remedies" OR
insurance finds items containing either or
both search terms.
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NOT.
Placing not
between keywords excludes specific words from
your search.
- Searching "homeopathic remedies" NOT
insurance will net results that contain the phrase "homeopathic
remedies" but do not contain the word
insurance.
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Subjects
- Subject searches are the best way to locate material on your specific
topics.
- However, you must know the correct Library of Congress Subject Heading
(also called controlled vocabulary).
- Accessing the correct controlled vocabulary is easy!
- Perform a keyword search and look for an item relevant to your topic.
Bring up the catalog record of the item. Scroll down: the subject headings/controlled
vocabulary are listed under "subject." For this example, the
phrase "homeopathic remedies" was searched.
Example of subject headings
in a CLICnet library catalog record:
- Locate a subject heading relevant to your topic.
- Continue your search by clicking on the subject heading link.
This often will take you to an alphabetical index of subject headings,
which can help you to further narrow your search. Click on an additional
subject heading. Example: clicked on Homeopathy.
- You've completed a subject search! All results include materials whose
contents specifically focus on homeopathy. You do not
need to be concerned with weeding out irrelevant or useless results.
- As an added bonus, you can use your newly learned controlled vocabulary
term to help in future searches. Whenever presented with a search box
that gives you the option to search subjects, you're prepared.
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