Skip to Main Content

Emergent Media Production: MSP 4741 / 8741

Research help for the cross-listed course, MSP 4741 / 8741: Emergent Media Production

Search Effectively

magnifying glassUnlike Google, library databases often don't understand an entire sentence. So you'll need to break your topic down into the most important ideas - the keywords. 

  • What are important issues related to this topic? Are there specialized terms that experts on this topic might use? What aspects of this topic are being ignored?
  • Who are important people associated with this topic? Who writes about this topic, and whose voices are not being heard?
  • When did important events happen that might have influenced this topic? 
  • Where are important places that might have influenced this topic? What kinds of places are they? 
  • Why does this matter? Why should people care about this topic?
  • How does the information I have found change what I thought about this topic? How and why do different authors discuss this topic differently?

 

example of venn diagram using ANDUse the word AND to find only sources that mention both keywords.

Example: social media AND mental health 


AND lets you make demANDs with your search.

This search will bring back fewer results than searching either keyword on its own.

example of venn diagram using ORUse the word OR to expand your search with additional keywords.

Example: social media OR instagram 


OR gives you mORe.

This search will find sources that include either word, so you'll see more results than by searching for just one keyword.

Another suggestion is to use the asterisk symbol ( * ). The asterisk is useful when you have word variations. Place the asterisk symbol at the end of the part of the word all of the variations share (e.g. photo* retrieves photo, photos, photography, photographer, photosynthesis, etc.).

 

example of venn diagram using both AND plus ORTry combining some of your related keywords together.

Example: mental health AND (social media OR instagram) 


This search will save you time from having to try each keyword combination one at a time.

Use "quotation marks" to search for words in a phrase, such as a proper name.

Example: "social media" AND "mental health"

 

search terms in a search box using quotation marks

This will bring back results that only use that exact phrase.

search results screenMost library databases have search tools built in. Try some of these:

  • Topic/Subject: think of these as official hashtags. Use them to find sources about that subject.
  • Date: limit your search to sources published between specific years
  • Resource Type: limit your search to specific kinds of sources (e.g. newspapers, book chapters, datasets)
  • Peer Reviewed: limit your search to scholarly journal articles

Look on the left and right of your search results, or for an "advanced search" page to find these tools - and more!

Search Strategies

  1. lightbulbUse search terms/keywords that relate to the broader type of technology instead of the specific name of the technology if you are unable to find any sources or not enough. Keywords examples include:
    1. virtual reality
    2. augmented reality
    3. mixed reality
    4. immersive media
    5. immersive storytelling
    6. convergent media
    7. digital storytelling
    8. location based technologies
    9. Computer simulation
    10. artificial intelligence
    11. machine learning
  2. Incorporate search terms/keywords that consider broader benefits/impacts/influences/concerns. Keywords examples include:
    1. empathy
    2. ethics or morals
    3. psychological aspects
    4. perception
    5. telepresence
    6. human-computer interaction
    7. technology--psychology
    8. social presence
    9. sound or audio
    10. health
    11. gender
    12. race
    13. ethnicity
    14. identity
    15. marketing or advertising
    16. journalism
    17. business
    18. sustainability
       
  3. Review any subject terms/phrases that might be tagged to an article of interest for future keyword suggestions.
     
  4. Review the language used in the abstract of an article of interest for future keyword suggestions.
     
  5. Review the bibliographies of sources you know you intend to use. The sources listed in those bibliographies may be about similar topics and, thus, equally relevant for you. If you see a title of interest, search that title in the Library Search to determine if we have access to it.