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BIOL 320 STUDENTS Fall 2012

GETTING THE MOST OUT OF THE LIBRARY. BIOL 320 STUDENTS Fall 2012. Agenda. Information Flow Finding & Getting Books, etc. Finding & Getting Journal Articles Science Databases Journal (Known-Item) Search Citing Sources (CSE style). Flow of Scientific Information. Timeline 0 1-2 years

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BIOL 320 STUDENTS Fall 2012

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  1. GETTING THE MOST OUT OF THE LIBRARY BIOL 320 STUDENTS Fall 2012

  2. Agenda • Information Flow • Finding & Getting Books, etc. • Finding & Getting Journal Articles • Science Databases • Journal (Known-Item) Search • Citing Sources (CSE style)

  3. Flow of Scientific Information Timeline 0 1-2 years 2-3 years 2-3 years 3 years 4 years 5 years 7-10 years http://www.lib.uwaterloo.ca/usered/grad/researchskills/flow_of_info.html http://www.indiana.edu/~cheminfo/acs800/structs.html

  4. Get item in your hands! Need books? Need articles? Databases Full-text Print Interlibrary Loan No No Catalog Library stacks Yes Steps of Library Research

  5. “Good” Starting Point Databases • Academic Search Premier • 4,200 journals, about 3,200 full-text; all subject areas; with abstracts • Applied Science & Technology • “Classical” coverage; limited full-text, about 200; with abstracts • ArticleFirst • About 16,500 periodicals; all subject areas; NO abstracts • General Science • 150 core publications in all areas; limited full-text; with abstracts

  6. “Better / Best” Databases – Next Tier • Medline / PubMed Premier bio-med source; nearly 10,000 journals; abstracts; also on the Web as PubMed; coverage 1966 – current • Biological Abstracts Premier bioscience source; over 4,000 journals; coverage 1969 – current • Biological & Agricultural Full-Text Over 360 journals from the 1980s onward; with abstracts; ~100 in full-text from 1997 onward

  7. “Better / Best” Databases – Top Tier • Web of Science Web-based version of Science Citation Index , Social Sciences CitationIndex and Arts & Humanities Citation Index; over 8,000 titles in all areas; abstracts; tracks citations (times cited and cited references) • ScienceDirect Over 1,700 full-text journals published by Elsevier in all areas of the sciences • Wiley Online Library Over 2,000 full-text journals published by Wiley, mostly science, medicine and engineering subject areas, but also covering social sciences • ACS Publications Full-text online coverage of all 30+ journals published by the American Chemical Society from initial volumes and years (back to the late 1800s) to present

  8. MEDLINE versus PubMed One database Remote access requires NIS account Thru campus servers Coverage back to 1965 Find It! links to full-text articles AND print titles held in Library Several databases Free on Internet – no NIS account needed No campus connection Coverage back to 1950’s Links to full-text articles GENERALLY ONLY if on campus & no links to print journals in Library

  9. Remember … Article Citations … Don’t leave your databases without them!* • Title of article • Author • Journal name (often called “Source”) • Volume (and issue) number • Date • Page(s) • * Print or e-mail your citations (or accurately write them out) or use

  10. JOURNAL CITATION FORMATSVARY WIDELY! “…you won’t have to plunge too deeply into the primary literature to discover a bewildering array of variations…” (McMillan, p. 118) LEE, T. D., and F. A. BAZZAZ. 1982. Regulation of fruit and seed production in an annual legume, Cassia fasciculata. Ecology 63: 1363-1373. [American Journal of Botany] 1. Sen, R. & Baltimore, D. Cell47, 921-928 (1986). [Nature] [1] Auerbach, S., Zhou, F.C., Jacobs, B.L., and Azmitia, E., Serotonin turnover in raphe neurons transplanted into rat hippocampus, Neurosci. Lett., 61 (1985) 147-152. [Developmental Brain Research] Low, M. G., and Saltiel, A. R. (1988). Structural and functional roles of glycosylphosphatidylinositol protein anchors. Science 239, 268-275. [Cell] (examples from Victoria E. McMillan “Writing Papers in the Biological Sciences” 3rd Ed., pp. 118-19)

  11. Those Pesky Journal Abbrev’s … CSE Style prefers the use of journal title abbreviations. You should NOT attempt to guess at the abbreviation. You can get the correct, standardized abbreviation via the PubMed journals database. • Google PubMed to get the address, or type in: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nlmcatalog/journals • Enter the “journals database” (if not already there) • Type in the (full) name of the journal • PubMed will give you the official abbreviation • Conversely, if you need the full name of a journal, type in the abbreviation

  12. CSE Name-Year SystemJournal Article, Single Author Bannier S. 2009. Overweight after deep brain stimulation of the subthalmic nucleus in Parkinson disease: long term follow-up. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 80(5): 484-488. Sample text citation: In Bannier’s (2009) study of Parkinsonism…

  13. CSE Name-Year SystemOnline Article Savage E, Ramsay M, White J, Beard S, Lawson H, Hunjan R, Brown D. 2005. Mumps outbreaks across England and Wales in 2004: observational study. BMJ [Internet]. [cited 2007 May 31]; 330(7500):1119- 1120. Available from: http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi /reprint/330/7500/1119 doi:10.1136/bmj.330.7500.1119 Sample text citation: Savage et al. (2005) described…

  14. DOI? DOI: Digital Object Identifier – is a unique permanent web address of a journal article; it can therefore be hosted in ANY database. Using a DOI for retrieving an article: • Go to http://dx.doi.org • Type or paste in the DOI • If the Library subscribes to the journal and the article is available in our holdings, the complete full-text article will open in another window.

  15. CSE Name-Year SystemArticle or Chapter in an Edited Volume Beer RD. 2009. Beyond control: the dynamics ofbrain-body-environment interaction in motor systems.In Sternad D, editor. Progress in motor control: a multidisciplinary perspective. New York: Springer. p. 7-24. Sample text citation: A recent study by Beer (2009)…

  16. CSE Name-Year SystemBook Gilbert AN. 2008. What the nose knows: the science of scent in everyday life.New York: Crown. Sample text citation: Gilbert (2008) provides an interesting …

  17. CSE Name-Year SystemWebsite What is autism? an overview [Internet].New York: Autism Speaks; [updated 2009; cited 2009 11 April]. [about 3 p.]. Available from http://www.autismspeaks.org/whatisit/index.php Sample text citation: A current overview of autism is available online (What is autism…2009).

  18. “…you won’t have to plunge too deeply into the primary literature to discover a bewildering array of variations [in citation formats] …” Victoria E. McMillan “Writing Papers in the Biological Sciences”3rd Ed., p. 118

  19. is a web-based bibliography and database manager which • allows you to create your own personal database. References • can be imported from library catalogs, online databases, • text files, websites and more. • Why Use It? • Gather, store, manage and share references or citations • Generate bibliographies in numerous citation formats such • as CSE, APA, MLA, Chicago, and many others, including those used by hundreds of journals • Store references online and have access to them anywhere • using your web browser. • http://calstatela.libguides.com/refworks

  20. Setting up your account • Creating file folder(s) • Indirect exporting from a database usingRefWorks search features (PubMed) • Direct exporting from a database (MEDLINE & Biological Abstracts) • Creating bibliographies (CSE or whatever)

  21. Still going around in circles? • Ask at the Reference Desk, 1st Floor, Library North • Read online help screens & tutorials • Ken Ryan (STEM Librarian) 323-343-4943 kryan@calstatela.edu … or check out the other options listed on the “Ask a Librarian” page at the following URL: http:// www.calstatela.edu/library/asklib.htm

  22. Set up your account in and practice importing citations, setting up files and creating bibliographies. Oh, yes…also work on your Library Assignment. And now … time for some exercise!

  23. That’s all, folks!

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