Title: ISI Web of Science
1ISI Web of Science
- Search Notes for the Citation Indexes
2About the Web of Science
- Made up of 3 indexes
- Science Citation Index
- Social Science Citation Index
- Arts and Humanities Citation Index
- Covers 8,500 research publications
- Goes back to 1973 (or earlier, depending on your
subscription) - Its big. Its expensive. You will only find it
at a major research library, but its worth being
aware of
3Citation indexes whats special
- The significant feature of the ISI citation
indexes is that each record includes its list of
cited references - the bibliography - for that
article. - This citation information can be searched and
used in a number of ways
4How are cited reference lists used?
- By searching on who has cited a classic paper,
you can track the history and development of an
idea from when it was first published, to now - a
way to bring research forward, from old to new. - It is also a way to find a current article - and
by looking at its bibliography (if the items are
linked), immediately start tracking the ideas
back in time.
5How are cited reference lists used? (cont)
- A researcher could use this database to find out
who is citing their work, and in what context. - Faculty who are up for tenure can use this to
show how many times their papers have been cited
by others - important in proving their worth.
6How are cited reference lists used? (cont)
- Perhaps one of the most intriguing uses ISI has
built in a feature called Related Records.
Related records are 2 articles that have at least
one cited reference in common. Articles that
share 4 - 5 - or more references - are likely to
be discussing the same topics. This is a unique
way to locate relevant papers on a topic, that
may not have been found with a traditional author
or subject search.
7One more feature
- The ISI Citation Indexes include an Address
field for where each author works, allowing you
to track what a colleague or a competitor! at a
specific institution is publishing. - (as you can tell, this is a very academic
product)
8Nuts bolts operators
- Boolean operators AND, OR, NOT
- Proximity operator SAME
- Phrases are designated with double quotes
- Truncation/wildcards
- - zero to many characters
- ? - substitutes for one character, ?? - 2
characters, etc. - Can be used within a word, or at the end
- Order of precedence SAME, NOT, AND, OR. Use
parentheses to change the order.
9More nuts
- You also have Limit functions
- Specify a Language
- Or a Document Type
- This is really a form of field searching, right?
By pulling it out and making it a labeled part of
the interface, it helps you notice it.
10Access the Web of Science
- Today only
- Special link and username/password (so we can all
get in at once) http//access.isiproducts.com/s
alesUser ID tbaPassword tba case
sensitive! - Click ISI Web of Knowledge next screen, click
ISI Web of Science(During the week, use the
link in the your school names library website
as you normally would.)
11Once you are connected
- When you connect via the libraries you wont have
to wade thru those extra screens. Usually youll
start at the screen we see now - where you
choose - First button Full Search
- Next screen Leave just Science Citation Index
selected, (unclick the other 2) and set the years
to 1973- now. - Now click General Search
12A simple search
- Acid rain same adirondack? - as Topic
- Select Article as document type
- Search. (you should get )
- Explore the third one - how many references does
it have? How many times has it been cited? - Take a look at the Related Records - do they
seem related/useful to you?
13A search scenario
- You are applying for the position of librarian
for physics and astronomy at the insert school
name here. You want to make points when you meet
the astronomy faculty, so you see if you can find
out what theyve been writing about. In ISI you
search - Topic galax
- Address approp. name same astron same state
abbreviation
14The weird one searching a Cited Reference
- On the General Search screen, click the Cited
Ref Search button at the top of the screen. - You are interested in seeing how many times (and
who most recently), has cited the classic work by
James Watson called The Double Helix - describing
the discovery of DNA.
15Searching a Cited Reference
- Put in
- CITED AUTHOR Watson J
- CITED WORK double helix
- CITED YEAR 1968
- Yikes! A million variations! Is this all the same
thing? Unfortunately, yes this represents all
the ways people have cited this work in their
bibliographies, and every time somebody writes
their reference little differentlyor just
wrong!it gets its own entry. - Select (checkbox) the 2 with the most hits on
this page, and click the Finish Search button.
16OK, enough science-
- Click the Date DB limits button at the top of
the screen. - Switch to the Social Science Citation Index
(un-check Science, check Social Science) - Click General Search
17A search in Soc. Sci. Cit. Index
- In AUTHOR local library school faculty name
- In ADDRESS your school name same Lib
- Search!
- Take a look thru the results - what does faculy
name mostly write about? - Pick one of the results What articles have
cited this one? (return to the record for this
article) What are some of the related records?
Are they useful or just bizarre?
18Looking up Dr. faculty names article as a
cited reference search
- Say you had simply been handed a copy of Dr.
faculty names article on topic from article
specified on previous slide, and you wanted to
trace the evolution of his/her ideas, i.e. see
who had cited this article. - Click the Cited Ref Search button at the top of
the screen. - Fill in
- CITED AUTHOR lastname f
- CITED WORK source name - supply approp abbrev
- CITED YEAR year
19Dr. faculty names article as a cited reference
- On your results page, click the checkbox next to
the (one) result, and click Search. - This will jump you directly to articles that
cited Dr. faculty names article.
20Emailing, printing results - 1
- Hang on to your hats - this is how it goes
- Click the checkboxes for the records you want to
email/print/etc. on the page youre looking at - Click the Submit Marks button
- Go to the next page of results, repeat. You must
click Submit Marks on each page as you select
records! - Clicking Submit Marks causes a new button to
appear in the top line of buttons Marked List
21Emailing, printing results - 2
- When youve marked and Submitted the Marks for
the records you want, click the new Marked List
button. - This gives you all sorts of choices
- All the little checkboxes in the middle of the
screen are additional fields you can include with
the records. The default is author, title and
source. - The email function is nice it lets you put in
your address for return address, and add a
note. - Other options are
- format for print, save to file, export to
reference software