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FYML 102N: World Food and Foodways

World Food and Foodways

Welcome to the research guide for World Food and Foodways, your First-Year Seminar!

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Photo by Image by Ann Jury from Pixabay 

This guide will assist you in locating resources for your First-Year Seminar research project and coursework.

Be sure to complete the tutorials on the First-Year Seminar Tutorials to sharpen your skills in finding, retrieving, analyzing, evaluating, and using information for college research.

If you have any questions about research or library resources don't hesitate to contact your embedded librarian for this course, Rachel Crane, using the contact information to the left.

Ablah Library Resources

French-African Cuisine Breaks Cultural Barriers

Google and SmartSearch Compared

What are the similarities and differences between Google and Smart Search?

 Google:

  • Google searches the open web (free, publicly available content), which is only a small percentage of all online content.
  • Google uses natural language, which allows users to search with phrases or questions, instead of keywords.
  • Google offers an advanced search feature if you want to do a search with specific keywords and Boolean operators (OR, AND, NOT) (access “advanced search” under “settings”).
  • Google has some tools that allow users to filter results, like content type (image, video, news, shopping, etc.) and time range.     
  • One of the tools Google uses to organize search results is its PageRank algorithm, which generally organizes results based on popularity (how often the sites are visited), not relevance or accuracy.
  • Google results are personalized for users based on a number of factors, including search history, location, browser type, and IP address. This means that two people conducting the same search in different locations might see different results. It also means the results of future searches you do might be influenced by your search history.

Smart Search:

  • Smart Search primarily searches content that the library has access to either online or in print form. It searches the library catalog and multiple databases. Most online content in Smart Search is behind a paywall (databases that the library subscribes to so patrons can access the content), but some is open access (free, publicly available).
  • Smart Search allows you to use natural language in a search, so you can search with a phrase or question. In the results, you will see certain words have been bolded, which means Smart Search has identified them as important.
  • Smart Search has multiple filters that let you narrow and modify your search results. For example, you can limit results by content type, publication date, discipline, subject terms, database, and more.
  • Smart Search offers an advanced search feature if you want to do a search with specific keywords and Boolean operators (OR, AND, NOT).
  • By default, SmartSearch results are organized by relevance, but users can choose to have results organized by date, author, or title.
  • SmartSearch does not personalize results. Two users doing the exact same search in different locations will get the same results. Users do not need to log in to use SmartSearch (although they may have to log in to access the full-text of some library resources), so individual search histories are not recorded in the same way they are by Google.
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