Start by constructing a search strategy using the following four steps.
STEP 1 -- Summarize your research topic in one or two sentences.
I am interested in finding research on the effect of sedimentation on the survival of salmon eggs. |
STEP 2 -- Identify the unique ideas or concepts associated with your research topic.
A research topic typically has two or three unique concepts. In the sciences these concepts commonly fall into one of these categories: subject; taxonomic; geographic; time; habitat; life stage, population or age group; organ system; chemical substance; genetic sequence; disease; or methodology, technique or test.
STEP 3 -- Brainstorm appropriate keywords for each concept.
Each concept usually can be described using several specific keywords. These keywords can be developed in several ways - your personal knowledge of the topic, suggestions of others, or background reading that you do in secondary sources. In making a list of keywords consider the following:
"Controlled Keywords" Many literature databases and catalogs use "controlled" keywords that come from associated thesauri or lists of keywords and which are assigned by indexers to every record in the database. These "controlled" keywords bring together similar ideas under one standardized word or phrase that may be described in the discipline literature by several different keywords. In a database record they may be called "descriptors", "subject headings", "categories," etc.
marine biology
↑ marine flora ↑ marine algae ↑ red algae (Rhodophyta) ↑ coralline algae (Coralinales) ↑ Sporolithon ↑ Sporolithon ptychoides |
salmon or oncorhynchus |
sediment* retrieves sediment, sediments, sedimentation |
STEP 4 -- Establish the relationship between each keyword and concept.
Use Boolean operators -- AND, OR, and NOT -- and nesting to connect together every keyword and concept in your search statement. AND connects each concept and OR connects the synonymous keywords under each concept. Keywords connected by ORs need to be entered in the same search box or enclosed within parentheses ( ) when searching a database. See the sample search above as well as the following example:
(sediment* or silt*) and (hatch* or survival) and (salmon* or oncorhynchus) and (egg* or embryo* or redd*) |
Sometimes it is useful to conduct a preliminary search before beginning your main search. This search serves two purposes: 1) it is a means to get a basic sense of the literature on your topic; and 2) it serves as a source of keywords for each of your concepts and it will help you assess whether searching on specific keywords is likely to yield relevant results.
Concepts within a topic are often a mixture of specific and broad ideas. A useful approach is to identify the most specific concept and search that one first. If this initial search retrieves only a few references, just browse through them and identify the ones relevant to your topic. If the search retrieves many references, add another concept using the "and" connector to decrease your results.
Use "controlled" keywords as described above. If you do not know what "controlled" keywords to use, conduct an initial search using the keyword(s) you have. In reviewing the search results look for "controlled" keywords, often called keywords, categories, or subject headings, which commonly appear as part of each citation or abstract. Re-enter your search adding these "controlled" keywords to your existing keywords.
Use a "building block" approach to searching if the database you are searching allows for it. Enter each of your concepts individually by ORing together the list of synonymous keywords you have created, e.g., prevent* or avoid* or deterr*. After each of your concepts has been entered use the database "Search History" feature, if available, to AND together each of the concepts. Employing this approach allows you to:
Searching is a dynamic process. As you proceed in your literature search, and as your personal knowledge increases, your list of keywords is likely to grow and/or be refined.