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Occupational Therapy

Subject Guide for ULM's Occupational Therapy Program

Keywords

Keyword Extraction

While you may be used to going to Google and typing in "Who invented the telescope" this will not work in a database. This is because search engines like Google use natural language processing. They can understand your questions as you ask them. Databases do not work this way. Databases use keyword searching

Keyword searching involves taking a research question and pulling out the keywords. For example, if your research question is:

Do healthcare disparities in elderly women have a negative impact on patient outcomes?

You would look through the question and pick out the keywords. For this question, we can pull out disparitieselderly women, and healthcare.

Then, you would use Boolean connectors to connect the terms in a way that the database can understand. Your end search would look something like this:

disparities AND elderly women AND healthcare

 

Searching Tips

Use Boolean Connectors AND, OR, and NOT to refine your searches!

  • AND narrows a search (fruits AND vegetables)
  • OR broadens a search (fruits OR vegetables)
  • NOT excludes a term (vegetables NOT broccoli)

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Use Truncation, Wildcards, and other Methods to Limit your Search! 

  • Add an asterisk mark ( * ) to the end of a keyword to include its variations (e.g., librar* for library, libraries, librarian, librarians, librarianship etc.) in a search.
  • Use a question mark ( ? ) within words to search for single character variations (e.g., wom?n for woman or women).
  • Use quotation marks ( " " ) around words to create keyword phrases (e.g., "green marketing")
  • Check the database you are using for other ways to limit your search.

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This is EBSCO Discovery Service, this discovery search box searches across most of the library's resources all at once and can search some external resources.

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