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How to Conduct a Literature Search

How to Conduct a Literature Search. By: Danielle Davidov, PhD . When to do a literature search? . When you want to find out more about a given topic After deciding upon your research topic or research question Before beginning a research project or study . Why do a literature search? .

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How to Conduct a Literature Search

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  1. How to Conduct a Literature Search By: Danielle Davidov, PhD

  2. When to do a literature search? • When you want to find out more about a given topic • After deciding upon your research topic or research question • Before beginning a research project or study

  3. Why do a literature search? • 1) To decide if your research question or project is “novel” • It is useless to waste time, money, and resources on a project that has already been carried out • 2) You will have to do it eventually, anyway • Introduction/Discussion/References for grant or manuscript

  4. Why do a literature search? • 3) You will gain knowledge about your topic of interest • 4) You might find a better aspect of the topic to study • 5) You might find other variables to include or measures/instruments to use • Ex) Previously used and validated tools or surveys • 6) Learn from what others have done right and wrong • “Limitations” sections in manuscripts • “Future directions” sections in manuscripts

  5. Why do a literature search? • Mainly, you want to see if your research question has already been answered and if going forward with your study will ADD to the scientific literature and knowledge about the topic (not repeat what has previously been done) • You want to find where your research idea “fits” in the current research on your topic. Are there any “gaps” in the literature that need addressed?

  6. What if it has been done before? • It’s okay if your research question has already been addressed in the literature • You can put a different spin on the question • Ex) Carry out the study in a rural population (vs. urban) • Ex) If males have been studied, study females • Ex) If attending physicians’ attitudes have been measured, take a look at mid-level providers or resident attitudes • Ex) If the topic hasn’t been studied in the United States • A thorough review of the literature will tell you whether your new “spin” on the topic has merit and is worth pursuing

  7. How to conduct a search • Literature searches are done through keywords and sometimes use Boolean operators (AND, OR, NOT) • Ex)If you wanted to study emergency physicians’ attitudes towards ultrasound • “Emergency” AND • “Attitudes” AND • “Ultrasound” AND • This search will find all records containing the word ‘emergency’ as well as ‘attitudes’ and ‘ultrasound’ in the same source

  8. Search tips • Use double quotes to find exact phrases such as “ultrasound” or “ultrasound training” • Use a tilde “~” to broaden your search to synonyms • A search for “~dog” returns results for “dogs,” “pet,” “puppies,” etc.

  9. Boolean Operators • AND – Use “AND” between words to narrow your search and retrieve records containing all of the words • Ex) “mice AND mouse AND rat” – will retrieve records containing ‘mice’, ‘mouse’ AND ‘rat’ • OR = use “OR” between words to broaden your search and retrieve records containing any of the words • Ex) “mice OR mouse OR rat” – will retrieve records containing EITHER ‘mice’, or ‘mouse’ or ‘rat’ • NOT = use “NOT” between words to narrowsearch and retrieve records that do not contain the term following it • Ex) mice or mouse NOT rat – will retrieve records containing ‘mice’ or ‘mouse’, but NOT ‘rat’

  10. Other search tips • support.google.com/websearch/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=136861&rd=1

  11. A Fine Balance • Literature searches are a fine balance: • If your search is too narrow, you will get very few, if any, results • Ex) emergency physicians AND attitudes AND ultrasound AND survey AND West Virginia • You are unlikely to many relevant results with this search

  12. A Fine Balance • If your search is too broad, you will get thousands of results • Ex) physician attitudes • Can be overwhelming!

  13. Places to search for articles • We will go through several search sites: • 1) PubMed • 2) WVU Libraries • Ebscohost • 3) Google Scholar

  14. Start with PubMed • PubMed is a good starting point for medical or emergency medicine articles • http://pubmed.gov

  15. 51 articles is very manageable

  16. Click here to read the full article Here are other articles that might be relevant based on your search

  17. Save it! Full text article!

  18. Ebscohost – via WVU Library • WVU Libraries - http://www.libraries.wvu.edu • Links to multiple, searchable databases • If you’re on campus – you have immediate access • If you’re at home: • You have to enter your username/Master ID and password: • 6 digits – Day of birth (2 digits) and last 4 digits of 700 number (WVUID) • If you don’t know your 700 number: • Click here  https://centralid.wvu.edu/wvuid/findwvuidssn.phtml • Or - Call 304-293-4444 • Call 304-293-4040 if you are still having problems accessing WVU library databases from home

  19. http://www.libraries.wvu.edu You will most likely be looking for peer-reviewed articles for your literature searches, but you can also find books, newspapers and magazines at this site A Good Starting Point! www.libraries.wvu.edu Clicking “Databases” will lead you to peer-reviewed journals Click here! “Databases” to search for articles Help here! “Ask a librarian”

  20. Search by subject

  21. A list of medicine databases: Databases that say “Full Text” will allow you to read entire articles, not just the abstracts Scroll down: MEDLINE is a good medical database to search the medical literature

  22. OR - Instead of searching by Subject, you can click “Ebscohost” on the right and search multiple databases at once (recommended) *Ebscohost: search several databases at once

  23. Click the first database, then “Continue”

  24. Click “Choose Databases” to view all other available databases on one page

  25. The selected databases are good choices for a search of the medical literature, but you can always choose more, less or different databases based on your topic If you want to research sports medicine or TBI, for example, you can choose SPORT Discus Run your mouse over the icon to view a description of the database

  26. Enter your keywords, then click “Search”

  27. Scroll down to view all the results… Clicking these options should direct you to the full article

  28. Save it! Full text article!

  29. Sometimes, clicking “Find @ WVU” will give you the full article as well, but not always

  30. Reading the abstract will give you an idea what the article is about and tell you if its worth reading the whole thing

  31. If one of these articles looks interesting, you can enter the title or author into the search boxes to find it – or you can search through Google Scholar Reference lists of relevant articles are a great place to find more articles related to your topic of interest!

  32. Full text not available? • Sometimes you cannot find the full-text articles, even if you are searching through the WVU library website. • When this happens, you can use Google or Google Scholar to try to find the article: • http://google.com –or- http://scholar.google.com/ • Google scholar will give you mainly research articles, but Google itself may provide articles and other types of information – such as websites, guidelines, recommendations, etc., so searching both is a good idea

  33. On Google homepage, click “more” and then “Scholar” Search by keyword, title, or author here

  34. Can type keywords separated by “AND” or “OR” or type a sentence

  35. Still no full-text? • Sometimes you STILL can’t find full-text articles even if you search through Google. • If you can’t find an article you need and you have searched PubMed, EbscoHost, and Google/Google Scholar, contact the research coordinator with the FULL citation of the article you are trying to find!

  36. Now what? • Once you have gathered all of your relevant articles…you need to read them thoroughly! • If you are going to cite an article, make sure to read the ENTIRE manuscript, not just the abstract • Pay special attention to Introduction, Limitations, and Future Directions sections of manuscripts – these sections will tell you what is current about your topic as well as what research is still needed… • Try to focus on the most recent articles when conducting a literature review, but older articles can be important too • Meta-analyses, systematic reviews, and review articles are great when you are trying to synthesize the literature on a given topic!

  37. Next Steps • Try conducting a literature search using key terms related to your topic of interest • Start off by finding and reading 5 – 10 articles related to your topic • Write a few sentences or one to two paragraphs summarizing what you’ve read • Hopefully this will help you refine or reaffirm your research questions • You may be ready to start your IRB application

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