Specific benefits of Google Scholar

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roseline371277
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Joined: Sun Dec 22, 2024 3:37 am

Specific benefits of Google Scholar

Post by roseline371277 »

Google Scholar uses natural language that is easier to search than the often complex search rules required by library research databases.
Provides a wide range of interdisciplinary results .
It also provides links to articles that are “Cited by” and “Related articles.”
The “Cited by” feature allows you to view multiple articles that have cited the document you found.
It will help you in the research process because it can link you to other articles that have commented on the original article you found. This will give you a better understanding of how relevant and reliable that italy business mailing list original article is to your research topic.
 

When to use Google Scholar?
As a newbie to the research process, this is a tool that will benefit you by using more natural language to search.
When you need background information on your topic.
Need help brainstorming keywords and phrases to use when searching library research databases.
If you want to check which other articles have cited a specific document or book that you found especially useful for your research project .
How Google Scholar works
1. Search for articles


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The first thing you need to know about Google Scholar is that it basically works like an old search engine: to get the best results, you need to be as specific as possible.

The tool is designed to return a combination of the most relevant and most cited pages. This means you'll get what other scholars have cited the most. These are generally the most informative and reliable sources. Note that Scholar can locate search terms in both the title and article content. And this is even if the content is locked to subscribers .


Once you've navigated to a results page, you'll see information about the author, publisher, and date of each post.

You'll also see the location of the entry (for example, Google Books or JSTOR) and a link that says “other versions,” from which you can navigate to other web pages where the article appeared.

A link on the left side of the page will link directly to the article and indicate its format (HTML, PDF, etc.).

2. Build (and search) libraries

 

As you look through the results, you can save articles to your library.

Once you add something to your library, you can view a full information sheet for the item, including the abstract, and put it under a label to organize it with similar sources. For book entries, click “more” and you’ll see a link that says “Library Search.”


This link will take you to the page for that book, from which you can enter your zip code and check if you can find the book at your nearest library.
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