How to generate keywords:
1. Look at your hypothesis and questions and choose 2 to 4 important words or terms:
Example hypothesis and questions:
Nile River dam development adversely impacts local community water security
Q1. What is the water security on the Nile River?
Q2. How is dam building changing the water security on the Nile River?
Q3. How have the lives of displaced communities changed after dam construction, specifically regarding their water security (I am using the agent-based definition of water security as right access, right quantity, right quality, at the right time)?
2. Think of synonyms or alternative text for these terms:
Nile River | dam | water security |
---|---|---|
Nile River Basin | water management | sustainable/sustainability OR sustainab* |
river basin | river management | climate change |
Blue Nile river | dams/dammed OR dam* | impact |
White Nile | "Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam" | water resources |
"Aswan High Dam" OR "Aswan Dam" | water risk | |
barrage | water conflict |
3. Mix and match these terms in a database.
How to find subject headings:
1. Use your keywords to do a search in a database and look at the results to see subject headings suggested for each article.
2. Take a look in the thesaurus of a database.
Example: Academic Search Complete has a Subject Term thesaurus in the top left
3. Look online at the Library of Congress Subject Headings or Ask a Librarian
Boolean Operators are words that you use between your keywords/search terms to connect them in some way:
If you use PARENTHESES around terms, the search engine will look for the words in the parentheses first and then look for any additional terms. This can be helpful with you have similar phrases or different spellings for a phrase or term. For example, if you search for (nonnative OR non-native OR non native) AND English speakers, you will get results searching first for the different variations of the word non-native and then English speakers, putting emphasis on non-native first.
Source: https://ircutp.wordpress.com/utp-irc-faqs/boolean-operators/
For example, if you search for writ*, you will get:
write, writes, writer, written, writable, write-up, write-back, etc.
For example, if you search for "video games" you'll get things related to that phrase (games that you can play on a TV or computer screen), whereas if you search for video games without the quotation marks, you might get results on videos (movies), board games, or other areas that aren't quite what you were searching for.
Be careful though, quotation marks are only for phrases that are at least two words. If you try to put quotation marks around a single word, it might confuse a database and you won't get as many relevant sources.
Be careful with the terms that you use to search, especially with controversial topics. Sometimes, you might not even realize that the terms you use are leading to biased sources. Often times using terms like the ones in the examples below lead to what is known as CONFIRMATION BIAS, where the terms we use lead to results that verify the thoughts we already have on a topic.
Examples: