Results are listed in rank order based on some combination of
- how often the article is viewed,
- how many other articles it is
connected to (i.e. citations), and
- how influential those other
articles are
If you find yourself on page 9, chances are that the results are
less relevant but also less influential
Just keep in mind that there might be a reason that other scholars don't cite a given article...
This allows you to specify that the keyword you are searching for should appear in the author name, or in a specific date range
Example: your keywords are also common names
You may want articles that include the words "wolf" and "hunt" in the text or title, but you aren't interested in articles written by a Dr. Hunt, or a Professor Wolf
This allows you to specify that the keyword you are searching for should appear in the author name, or in a specific date range
Example: your keywords are also common names
Or maybe you want to find citing articles that are not by the same authors as the original article
Google’s public data search is an amazing resource for finding publicly available data sets.
It includes some visualization options; often a great place to start looking for interesting facts
You can select an indicator, the countries that you want to look at, the range of years, etc.
Click play on the right to see minimum wages across Europe
(in Euros/month)
Google also has a Dataset Search, which has a wider range of data sets, but they are not all in the public domain. It can still be tremendously useful for learning about data sources.