Posts Tagged ‘periodicals’

Can the library provide greater access to my articles?

Wednesday, February 2nd, 2011

If you would like to provide greater access to the articles you have written for scholarly publishers, then you can check the database below to see if the publisher will allow the library (or other organizations) to provide open access to your articles.  Research has shown strong correlations between open access and higher citation rates.  Most scholarly publishers allow their authors to post versions of articles to websites such as Peak Digital.  For example, the IEEE and the American Institute of Physics allow authors to archive the publisher’s version/PDF.  The publisher Elsevier will allow you to archive your post-print (final draft post-refereed version).

Please use the Sherpa/Romeo database of journal and publisher copyright policies.

Search Journal titles or ISSNs

Publisher names
for
find All keywords

Exact phrase only

contains

starts with

Exact phrase only

ISSN
Show open access mandate compliance in results for:

If you haven’t published your article yet, then you could consider publishing your article in a completely open access journal. This will give everyone in the world a chance to view your scholarly work without needing a subscription to the content.  Please let us know if you have any other questions concerning open access resources.

Joe

How much does the library spend on books and journals?

Thursday, September 9th, 2010

As of 2010, we have a materials budget of $5,355,230.  Of that, $1.4 Million is used to purchase print serials and $2.1 Million goes to web-based serial sources.  We will buy $1.6 Million worth of print books and ebooks this year.  The rest of the materials budget is used for other items.

How does this compare to other doctoral granting universities?  We have recent data for comparison in the 2007 ACRL Academic Library Trends and Statistics series of books.  In 2007, our materials budget was $4,483,000.  Compared to some other universities, we are in the pretty good shape.  For example:

  • Lehigh University $4,301,000
  • Villanova $4,140,000
  • College of William and Mary $4,020,000
  • University of Wyoming $3,390,000
  • Brandeis University $3,272,000
  • Depaul University $2,701,000
  • University of Colorado at Denver $2,491,000
  • University of Dayton $1,775,000

If you would like to recommend a purchase, let us know.

Joe

How can I find literature review articles?

Monday, August 16th, 2010

A good literature review provides an overview of research on a topic, discusses and compares the major authors and works within the given parameters of the review, and sometimes identifies gaps in the research.

Penrose Library subscribes to many databases that index literature review articles. Some of these databases let you limit your search specifically to literature reviews. From the Advanced search screen in PsycInfo, for example, select to limit your results by Methodology, and choose Literature Review. PubMed, the freely-available version of Medline, is another database that permits limiting by literature review, specifically systematic reviews. In PubMed you can select the Limits option (to the right of the search box) and then under Type of Article, choose Review, or from the main PubMed page, under PubMed Tools, click on Clinical Queries and limit your results to Systematic Reviews. Web of Science, which includes Science Citation Index, Social Sciences Citation Index, and Arts and Humanities Citation Index, enables you to refine your search by Document Type. After you have conducted your initial search, on the left menu select Document Type, Review, and click the Refine button. If you don’t see Review displayed in your initial results, try clicking on the “more options/values” link to display all document types available.

Some databases will indicate in the subject terms that the article is a literature review. SocIndex with Full Text, for example, uses “Literature Reviews” as a subject heading. In this database, you can type your topic keywords in the search box, and then add “Literature Reviews” to the next line and limit it to the SU Subject Terms field.

What do you do, however, when a database doesn’t have the option to limit to literature reviews?  Often a literature review will include these terms in the title or the abstract of the review, such as the article, “Sexual Assault in the U.S. Military: A Review of the Literature and Recommendations for the Future.” Try searching with the phrase, literature review* or words literature and review* and limit your terms to the title or abstract field, or leave your terms set to the default keyword search. This strategy can be employed in our subscription databases and also in Google Scholar. Although this strategy isn’t perfect, since it will sometimes pick up articles that include a brief literature review (usually mentioned in the abstract) rather than being a full review article, you will be able to find some literature reviews on your topic. Keep in mind that literature reviews address many areas of research. If you are looking for a literature review on a very narrow topic and are unsuccessful, try broadening the scope of your subject keywords. If the database has a thesaurus, use this tool to help you identify narrower, broader, and related subject terms.

An excellent and reliable source for literature reviews is Annual Reviews. Penrose Library subscribes to many of the annual reviews in the biomedical, life, physical, and social sciences, including anthropology, biochemistry, clinical psychology, economics, genetics, microbiology, neuroscience, physical chemistry, political science, psychology, and sociology, among many others. Each annual review volume publishes review articles on selected topics. Some volumes are organized by thematic categories, such as the Annual Review of Sociology, which provides review articles within Theory and Methods, Social Processes, Institutions and Culture, Formal Organizations, Political and Economic Sociology, Differentiation and Stratification, Individual and Society, and Policy categories. Annual Reviews can be searched by keyword in individual issues, journals, or across the entire journal set. Full-text access to Annual Review journals is available from the Annual Reviews website and several of our databases (search by journal title in the catalog and link to the website or database from the record).

How do I find online articles from Harvard Business Review?

Monday, June 28th, 2010

Penrose Library has online access to articles published in Harvard Business Review (HBR) through Business Source Complete, a subscription based database.  To access this resource and find articles in this periodical take the following steps:

1. Go to the library website at library.du.edu

2. Click on the “Databases” link located in the “Find Articles” section of the page

3. Click on the letter “B”

4. Scroll down and click on “Business Source Complete”

5. Once you are in the database notice that there is a section called “Limit your results” with various options you can use.  Enter Harvard Business Review in the box next to “Publication”

6.  You can then click the search button at the top to retrieve the articles published in HBR or you can enter keywords to search this periodical on specific topics.

eg

How can I find news periodicals by bias (liberal, conservative, etc.)?

Monday, June 7th, 2010

Penrose has access to several sources, such as the database Ulrichsweb (the online version of Ulrich’s Periodical Directory), that help researchers and writers identify periodicals by topic.  However, these sources often shy away from subjective labels that help users determine a publication’s bias (e.g. conservative, liberal, neo-conservative, etc.).  One tool that does give guidance on periodical bias  is the book Magazines for libraries.

Online lists compiled by librarians can also help you determine the bias of a magazine or journal.  Check out this list from Butler University Libraries, which has tabs for lists of conservative-, liberal-, and socialist-leaning publications.  Also helpful is this list from Santa Rosa Junior College Library.

Aren’t all of your journals in full-text online?

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

Finding full text online

You can search from our homepage to find out if we have online full-text of a particular journal.  Put the name of the database in the Find Books and More search box on the library’s homepage, library.du.edu.  The entry marked as [electronic resource] in your results list will show you the database(s) that contain that journal full-text and the years of coverage available.  Click on the year range to the right of the database name to access the database containing that journal.

Learn more about finding full-text articles on our Research Guide  Article Linker: Getting to Online Full Text.

Why aren’t all articles available in full-text?

Most, but not all, of our journals are available full-text online.  Access is negotiated with publishers and by database vendors, and not all are willing to participate in providing electronic access. In some cases the cost of online access in prohibitive for us. The library must decide how to best provide access to critical materials, given the constraints of cost, equipment, and use.