Summer Intensive 2023
When: Consider sources of recommended readings instead of searching directly for materials on your topic.
Where: Which websites you choose (search engines, databases)
How: Words you use in your searches, how you combine them, using indexes, filters, and sorting
Aim to match the terminology used in the kind of sources that you want to read:
Proper nouns (individual names, organizations, etc.) often make good search terms since they're used in both scholarly and popular texts. They're commonly used as subjects, too.
>> Finding a few sources about an individual can point you to useful search terms for the related topic.
Bender, Emily M., Timnit Gebru, Angelina McMillan-Major, and Shmargaret Shmitchell. “On the Dangers of Stochastic Parrots: Can Language Models Be Too Big? 🦜.” In Proceedings of the 2021 ACM Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency, 610–23. Virtual Event Canada: ACM, 2021. https://doi.org/10.1145/3442188.3445922.
Do blue light-filtering glasses work? (Cochrane Collaborative Systematic Review Protocol)
see appendix (pg. 13) -- we could replicate their exact search
Pick a paper topic. Consider using something you're familiar with, say a paper you already wrote.
Compare the output from several different large language model-based chatbots. Ask for peer-reviewed articles about your topic. What are your initial impressions of the results?
- Claude
- ChatGPT
- Perplexity
Prompt the chatbot to format these references in the style of your choice (choose a widely-used academic style like Chicago, MLA, APA, CSE).
Use what you know about looking up journals to trace the references. How many of the articles can you find?
Let's look at this tutorial from
(yup, you guessed it) UCLA WI+RE.
Break down your research interest into its core concepts. Then come up with multiple ways to refer to each concept.
Example: Anthropology Plus
Generating Keywords:
Try out the interactive keyword brainstorm tool from the University of Texas Libraries.
To find sources, you'll need to express your search terms in a way that the database/search engine can understand.
To do this, translate your ideas into statements:
words combined with operators (symbols) that provide clear instructions to the database.
ghost NOT scream
ghost AND scream
scream NOT ghost
scream OR ghost
Keywords | Results |
---|---|
hydrofracking | 54 |
hydrofracking OR "hydraulic fracturing" |
8,659
Keywords | Results |
---|---|
hydrofracking | |
hydrofracking OR "hydraulic fracturing" |
24,600
3,870
Keywords | Results |
---|---|
hydrofracking | |
19,400
Google Scholar
2,890
Search Operators
hydrofracking OR "hydraulic fracturing"
↑
↑
↑
Keywords | Results |
---|---|
19,400
Google Scholar
Search Operators:
hydrofracking OR "hydraulic fracturing"
Phrase Search
To search for articles with a specific phrase, enclose it in quotation marks:
"exact phrase"
hydrofracking OR hydraulic fracturing
215,000
Keywords | Results |
---|---|
19,400
Google Scholar
hydrofracking OR "hydraulic fracturing"
hydrofracking AND "hydraulic fracturing"
14,440
hydrofracking "hydraulic fracturing"
14,440
Search Operators:
OR and AND
To find articles matching either keyword, combine with OR
To find articles matching both, combine with AND *usually this is automatic
Keywords | Results |
---|---|
(hydrofracking OR "hydraulic fracturing") AND accidents |
6,440 |
(hydrofracking OR "hydraulic fracturing") AND (accidents OR spills) |
7,250 |
19,400
Google Scholar
hydrofracking OR "hydraulic fracturing"
Work in pairs/groups of 3.
Test out how different search operators work in the databases you reviewed yesterday:
- Which platform(s) are your databases on?
- Can you use the OR operator?
- Does enclosing a phrase in quotes ("like this") give you only results that matching that phrase?
- Can you combine sets of terms using parentheses or multiple search boxes?
Search groups: (word1 OR word2) AND (word 3 OR word 4)
- NOT
- Proximity - is there a proximity operator?
For example: television n2 violence would find "television violence" or "violence on television," but not "television may be the culprit in recent high school violence."