Title: CINAHL
1CINAHL
- Basic Searching Techniques
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2Basic (free-text searching)
- Basic searching is an unstructured search which
looks for the terms which you enter anywhere in a
reference. This will normally produce more hits
than an advanced (thesaurus) search
3After this presentation you will be able to
- Create a basic search strategy
- Search the bibliographic database CINAHL for
references to journal articles - Use TDNet, the library periodical/journal
catalogue to see if we have access to the
references which you have found
4Bibliographic Databases what do they do?
- List bibliographic details of journal articles
- Author title of the article
- Journal title, volume, issue and page(s)
- Mostly refer to journal articles, but some refer
to newspapers, conference papers, book chapters
or videos. - Can be searched much like WebCat.
- But
5They
- Do not normally include the full text of the
article itself. - Do not indicate whether the journal is in the
Library.
6 Library home page
www.soton.ac.uk/library
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8Select one of these links
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10Scroll down to see complete list
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15Searching exercise
-
- Stroke rehabilitation helping the patient
achieve independence
16Enter search term here then search
17Number of results
18These references will include
- References to articles about all aspects of
stroke not just rehabilitation - but
- They could also include references to articles
about pet therapy (people who stroke animals are
more relaxed) - so..
19You need to write a detailed search strategy
which will help to improve the search
20From your search question
- Identify the concepts of your question
- List alternative keywords and phrases
- Include both narrow and broad terms
- List alternative spellings and punctuation
21Question, Concepts Keywords
- Stroke rehabilitation helping the patient
achieve independence
22Identify your search terms
-
- Stroke rehabilitation helping the patient
achieve independence
23Identify alternatives
- stroke
- cerebrovascular accident
- cva
- rehabilitation
- therapy
- physiotherapy
- occupational therapy
- independence
- activities of daily living
- patient
- client
- customer
- (you may not use all of the keywords/alternatives)
24Join these terms together using
- Boolean logic
- and
- Truncation
25Boolean Logic
- Allows you to search for multiple
keywords - or combines different expressions for the same
concept - children or juveniles
- and links two different concepts together
- children and communication
26 Truncation
- Finds any keyword with a common stem
- Truncation symbol is commonly
- Physiotherap will find
- physiotherapist
- physiotherapists
- physiotherapy
27The search will look like this
- Search 1
- stroke or cerebrovascular accident
or cva - Search 2
- therap or rehabilitation or occupational therapy
or physiotherapy
282. Search
1. Enter search term/s
293. Search
2. Enter new search term/s
1. Add row
Search results
30We now need to combine these searches to retrieve
references which include both concepts
313.Choose the appropriate Boolean operator (in
this case and)
Results of second Search
1. Place a tick next to the searches you
wish to combine
321. Final result
2. To cut down your results use this link
33We will limit by
- Year/s (2005-2009)
- Abstract available
- English language
- UK Ireland journals only
34Limit to
1. Year/s
2. Abstract available
3. English language
4. UK Ireland journals
Scroll down to activate search with limits added
35To look at the references use this link
36Full details of the reference
37Return to results display here
Abstract
38If this full text link is present it will lead
you straight to the article itself
39If there is no full text link check the title on
TDNet our journals database
40Marking and saving references
412. then go to Folder View at the top of the page
- Add to folder those
- references you want
- to mark, page by page..
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43Then select them (again)
442. Then save your results
451.
2.
46Then choose how you want to save your results
47Go back to start another search or to exit
48This is what your saved results will look like
Your search strategy/history will be at the top
of the saved results.
49 with the references below
50Getting Help
- Subject Enquiries
- Level 3, Hartley Library
- Or contact
- Susan Dawson, Vicky Fenerty or Dorothy Stratford
via sohsenqs_at_soton.ac.ukÂ