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24/7 Research Chat |
Once you have decided that the resources you need are scholarly articles, and you have chosen an appropriate database from the Find Articles tab, the next step is to create a search.
Most people have learned to search using Google, but this is not efficient when using scholarly databases. Those who are searching efficiently do 4 things:
This guide is going to spend some time covering how to prepare a more efficient search strategy and some of the features of databases that make them useful for conducting scholarly research.
Preparing an efficient search strategy requires you to:
A thesis statement or a research hypothesis is not equivalent to a search you would do in a database. You may have to translate a thesis statement into multiple searches in order to understand multiple aspects of an issue.
The main things to keep in mind when creating a searchable question is that it needs to be or have:
Which of the following is a searchable question that follows SAM principles?
Example 1: Does technology effect children with hearing loss?
This question does not follow SAM and is therefore not a good searchable question. Technology is not specific - you will get thousands of results for hundreds of different types of technology. Effect is not measurable, nor is it specific, you want outcomes that you can actually measure. That requires a bit of specificity in the outcomes. Hearing loss is also not specific - which type are you truly interested in? Overall, this question is not accurate for what you are truly trying to find in the literature. You will get a lot of garbage results and spend a long time cherry-picking.
Example 2: Do cochlear implants increase scores on the Early Speech Perception Test for Profoundly Hearing-Impaired Children in children with hearing loss?
This question seems to solve many of the issues from above, but it is still not quite a SAM question. It is much more specific, it has a measurable outcome, and the papers you find would appear to be more precise and accurate. But can you spot the problem with this question? This question is BIASED. If you were to search it the way it is written, you would ONLY find articles discussing how cochlear implants are beneficial. You wouldn't necessarily retrieve any articles arguing the opposite, because by including directional terms like "improve," "enhance," "harm," "raise," etc., you are conducting a biased search.
Example 3: For children with severe to profound hearing loss, do cochlear implants change scores on the Early Speech Perception Test for Profoundly Hearing-Impaired Children?
This is an example of a SAM question. To avoid the bias from above, we used a neutral verb between the action and the outcome.
Once you've built your question, you now need to break it apart into it's most important individual topics. Each concrete idea in your question probably has multiple ways to express it - synonyms. You need to spend a bit of time brainstorming synonyms that represent the discrete main ideas of your question. Many times you may not be using exact synonyms, but a combination of words that represent the same idea. In the chart below, you can see deafness being used instead of direct synonyms like hearing loss.
Remember: Computers are dumb, YOU are smart. Computers do only as much as they are programmed to do and cannot truly understand human language. They don't understand that words have meaning or that synonyms exist, therefore you have to provide that information to the computer.
Ideas |
Cochlear implants |
Children with hearing loss |
Early Speech Perception Test for Profoundly Hearing-Impaired Children |
Keywords |
“Cochlear Implantation” “ear prosthetics” |
“Deaf children” “Hearing loss” “Deafness” “Persons with hearing impairments” “Deaf people” |
“Early Speech Perception Test” “ESP test” “speech tests” “Speech Discrimination Tests” |
After you have brainstormed lists of keywords and understand the main topics in your question, you then need to form a search string using the symbols and operators that databases and search engines understand.
Computers understand mathematical logic, so when you set up a search string, there are three main operations you can do. These operations are represented with three short words, known as Boolean Operators. Each operator tells the computer to perform a different type of action between the terms, or sets of terms, in your search.
Quotation Marks
Parenthesis
Truncation
Quotation Marks
Parenthesis
Truncation
Looking back at our list of synonyms, utilizing our symbols and combining ideas appropriately with Boolean operators, we might end up with a final search that looks similar to this:
("cochlear implants" OR "cochlear implantation" OR "ear prosthetics") AND ("children with hearing loss" OR "deaf children" OR "hearing loss" OR "deafness" OR "persons with hearing impairments" OR "deaf people") AND ("Early Speech Perception Test for Profoundly Hearing-Impaired Children" OR "ESP test" OR "Early Speech Perception Test" OR "speech tests" OR "speech discrimination tests")
Notice:
The above search can be copied and pasted into a single search bar, like those seen on the front page of most databases.
Question adapted from the ASHA Evidence-Based Practice Portal.