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Biological Sciences Senior Seminar

For Help

Contact liaison librarian Qinghua Xu

Go to AskUs! for a live chat with a librarian, to send us your question via email, or to call us at the Reference Desk.

   
Learning Outcomes

After this session, you will be able to:

1. Navigate the library web page; identify and obtain resources.
2. Differentiate between primary and secondary sources; limit searches to scholarly/peer reviewed journals
3. Construct a search strategy and conduct an effective search in most appropriate database(s).
4. Properly cite materials using CBE(CSE) style.

Choosing a topic

Brainstorm:

  • Which biology classes have interested you the most?
  • Which specific topics did you study in those classes?  
  • Does one of your professors have an area of study that interests you? Ask for his/her advice.
  • What unanswered questions do you have? This is an opportunity to explore those questions!

Browse:

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Identifying sources

What type of information will you need?

  • Primary sources (Journal articles)
  • Scholary/Peer-reviewed journals

Primary vs secondary

  • Primary literature: publications that report the results of original scientific research constitute the "primary" literature and include journal papers, conference papers, monographic series, technical reports, and theses and dissertations.
  • Secondary literature: the "primary" literature is eventually compacted into "secondary" sources which synthesize and condense what is known on specific topics. These include reviews, monographs, textbooks, treatises, handbooks, and manuals.

Scholarly journals / Peer reviewed journals

Scholarly journals:

  • contain articles written by experts and scholars in a discipline
  • purpose of the article is to publish the results of original research
  • the language of scholarly journals reflects the discipline covered
  • always have an extensive bibliography of works cited page
  • many scholarly journals are published by professional organizations, research institution
  • contain none or minimum advertising

Most scholarly journals are peer-reviewed (or refereed) publications. However, articles in some scholarly and professional journals are not peer-reviewed, but are selected by an editor or board. Standards of scholarship in such journals are often equal or comparable to those of peer-reviewed publications

Peer-reviewed journals:

Peer-reviewed journals (also called refereed journals) are scholarly journals that contain articles that have been evaluated by a panel of experts in the field before publication. The review process helps ensure that the published articles reflect solid scholarship in their fields.

Popular magazines are those types of publications that can be found in a bookstore or grocery store. Articles in popular magazines

  • are not necessarily written by experts in their fieldscover very current popular topicsmay contain opinions that are not reinforced by rigorous research
  • often do not include bibliographies or works cited pages.

Check "evaluating your sources" to see more information.

Finding Peer-Reviewed Journals and Journal Articles
There is no comprehensive source for identifying all peer-reviewed journals. To help determine if a particular journal is peer-reviewed:

1. refer to the journal itself (either to an individual issue of the journal or to the publisher's web site)

2. Ulrich's Periodicals Directory (volume 5 of Ulrich's lists the major peer-reviewed journals within the "Refereed Serials" section). The Directory is available at the Reference Desk.

3. some online databases to which the Library subscribes have begun to flag the peer-reviewed journals so they can be searched in the database. A selected list of databases offering peer-reviewed journal searching can be found here.

Creating a Search Strategy

1. State your topic idea as a question

2. Identify the main concepts or keywords in your question

Click here for information about creating a sound search strategy and a search preparation worksheet.

Search builder from University of Arizona Library

 

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Quick Links

Biosciences Portal

Using Interlibrary Loan and Universal Borrowing

Biosciences Department homepage



Finding books

Books in UWP library

Use the Library Catalog to find books owned by the UWP library. Use one of the catalog's keyword search options. Then look at the subject headings used in the records you retrieve. Is there one that describes what you're looking for? If so, click on it to find other books on your topic.

Books are arranged on the shelf by broad subject categories.

Call numbers in Biological Sciences

Suggested keyword for monongraphic series: Bulletin, special report, special paper, technical report, and technical paper.

E-book:
netLibrary
Knovel Scientific and Engineering Databases (Science/Engineering E-books)

Books in other libraries : To find books and other materials from public, school, and academic libraries across Wisconsin, search BadgerCat.

UW System Search: UW System Search/Universal Borrowing (UB) allows you make arrangements yourself to borrow materials from other UW libraries. All of the 13 UW libraries participate in this program. UB is built on the idea that the UW System libraries together are now one virtual library.

Using the UWP library catalog, you can simultaneously search other UW libraries to determine if the item you want is available. Simply select the "Multi Library Search" link at the top of our library's catalog and conduct your search. If the item is available from another UW library, you can complete an online request form, which will be transmitted directly to the owning library. The owning library will retrieve the material and send it to the UWP library. A courier service runs between the UW libraries five days a week and delivers the requested materials. You can use the UB service to request books and A/V materials, however, requests for periodical articles should still go through the regular interlibrary loan process.

Tutorial:

http://www.uwp.edu/departments/library/guides/guides/uw_systemsearch/index.htm

Interlibrary loan

Before placing an interlibrary loan request, you should:

  1. Check the UW-Parkside library catalog to be sure the materials are not owned by the university
  2. Check that the books, DVDs, CDs and videos are NOT available through UW System Search

Tutorial:
http://www.uwp.edu/departments/library/guides/guides/illiad/index.htm

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Locating articles

UWP Periodicals List

Tells you what journals the UW-Parkside library has access to and whether access is avaialbe in print or electronic for (or both).

Tutorial: using the UW-P periodicals list


Google Scholar

Type your queries in Google Scholar search box and click on FindIt!@UWParkside and you will be directed to full-text articles we own.

If you are off campus, go to "Scholar Preferences", and type library "UW-Parkside Library" as follow: and then



Biosciences Best Indexes

  • Biological Abstracts is an essential resource for research on life science topics from botany to microbiology to pharmacology, serving to connect researchers with critical journal coverage. It enables librarians, faculty and students to easily retrieve references to research reported in life science journals. More than 5,000 international journals are monitored to ensure that virtually every life science topic is covered, including agriculture, biochemistry, biotechnology, botany, ecology, the environment, microbiology, neurology, pharmacology, public health and toxicology.
    Indexing presents key terms in the same context used by the original author. This allows searching of the database for items, such as organisms or biochemicals, taking into account the relationship between them in the source literature.
    Click here for an online tutorial.

  • BioOne is a unique aggregation of high-impact, bioscience research journals. BioOne provides integrated access to interrelated journals focused on the biological, ecological, and environmental sciences. Currently, there are more than 150 full-text journals in the BioOne collection; additional publishers and journals will be added over time.
    Usage Notes: Click "Search" on the masthead for a form that allows you to search by author, institution, journal title(s), and by words appearing anywhere in an article, in the abstract, or in the references. You can choose to search "All Publications" or you can select one or more individual journal titles to search. Use Ctrl+click to select multiple journal titles.
    Click "Browse" on the masthead to browse current or archived journals, or to search BioOne Abstracts and Indexes.

  • PubMed is a service of the U.S. National Library of Medicine that includes over 16 million citations from MEDLINE and other life science journals for biomedical articles back to the 1950s. PubMed includes links to full text articles and other related resources. You may also search Medline via Ebsco .
    Pubmed Central : a free archive of biomedical and life science journals.

    PubMed Tutorial

  • Science Citation Index is a multidisciplinary database, with searchable author abstracts, covering the journal literature of the sciences. It indexes more than 5,700 major journals across 164 scientific disciplines. Cited Reference Searching allows searching for articles that cite a known author or work because the information stored about each article includes the article's cited reference list (often called its bibliography). To find articles that cite a known author or work, use the Cited Reference search option. Because this type of search differs from keyword or subject searching, you may want to review this short tutorial on how to search SCI. Click here for information about Journal Citation Reports and using ISI's Journal Impact Factor to evaluate journals..

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Specialized Indexes

  • Agricola (AGRICultural OnLine Access) is a bibliographic database of citations to the agricultural literature created by the National Agricultural Library (NAL) and its cooperators. Production of these records in electronic form began in 1970, but the database covers materials in all formats, including printed works from the 15th century. The records describe publications and resources encompassing all aspects of agriculture and allied disciplines, including animal and veterinary sciences, entomology, plant sciences, forestry, aquaculture and fisheries, farming and farming systems, agricultural economics, extension and education, food and human nutrition, and earth and environmental sciences. Although the AGRICOLA database does not contain the materials, thousands of AGRICOLA records are linked to full-text documents online, with new links added daily. AGRICOLA is searchable on the World Wide Web. For information on how to obtain library materials, see How to request materials from NAL.
    The AGRICOLA database is organized into two bibliographic data sets. Each data set may be searched separately, or they may both be searched together. One data set is the NAL Online Public Access Catalog, known as "NAL Catalog", containing citations to books, audiovisual materials, serial publications, and other materials in the NAL collection. AGRICOLA also contains some bibliographic records for items cataloged by other libraries but not held in NAL's collection.
    The second database is NAL's Article Citation Database, also known as: "Journal Articles". It includes citations, many with abstracts, to journal articles (see Journals Indexed in AGRICOLA), book chapters, reports, and reprints, selected primarily from the materials found in the NAL Catalog. Both data sets are updated daily with newly cataloged and indexed materials.

  • Applied Science and Technology Full Text indexes and abstracts articles of at least one column in length. Full Text coverage for selected periodicals is also included. English-language periodicals published in the United States and elsewhere are covered; non-English language articles are included if English abstracts are provided. Periodical coverage includes trade and industrial publications, journals issued by professional and technical societies, and specialized subject periodicals, as well as special issues such as buyers' guides, directories, and conference proceedings. Abstracting coverage begins with periodicals published in March 1993. The abstracts range from 50 to 300 words and describe he content and scope of the source articles. Full Text coverage begins in 1997.
    Subjects covered include: Acoustics, Aeronautics, Applied Mathematics, Artificial Intelligence, Atmospheric Sciences, Automatic Control, Automotive Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Chemistry, Civil Engineering, Communication & Information Technology, Computer Databases & Software, Construction, Electrical & Electronic Engineering, Engineering & Biomedical Materials, Energy Resources & Research, Environmental Engineering, Fire & Fire Prevention, Food & Food Industry, Geology, Industrial Engineering, Machine Learning, Machinery, Marine Technology, Mechanical Engineering, Metallurgy, Mineralogy, Mining Engineering, Neural Networks, Nuclear Engineering, Oceanography, Optical & Neural Computing, Petroleum & Gas, Physics, Plastics, Robotics, Solid State Technology, Space Science, Textile Industry & Fabrics, Transportation, Waste Management and Other Industrial & Mechanical Arts

 

  • Biological and Agricultural Index Plus is a bibliographic database that indexes English-language periodicals published in the United States and elsewhere. The database includes abstracts and full text coverage for selected journals. Periodical coverage includes a wide range of scientific journals, from popular to professional, that pertain to biology and agriculture. About 45 percent of the focus is on agriculture.
    Subjects Covered include: Agricultural Chemicals, Agricultural Economics, Agricultural Engineering, Agriculture and Agricultural Research, Animal Sciences, Biochemistry, Biology, Biotechnology, Botany, Cytology, Ecology, Entomology, Environmental Science, Fishery Sciences, Food Science, Forestry, Genetics, Horticulture, Immunology, Limnology, Marine Biology, Microbiology, Nutrition, Paleontology, Physiology, Plant Pathology, Soil Science, Veterinary Medicine, Weed Sciences, Wildlife Management and Zoology.

  • Biomedical Reference Collection: Basic is designed for doctors, research scientist, students, clinical specialists and managers, this medical database provides over 100 full text journals, including full text for many peer-reviewed publications. Biomedical Reference Collection: Basic Edition offers journals which cover virtually every area of medical study. Topics include: clinical medicine, nursing, dentistry, veterinary medicine, the health care system and the pre-clinical sciences. Examples of publications offered in Biomedical Reference Collection: Basic Edition include: American Surgeon, American Journal of Public Health, British Journal of Surgery, CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal, Annals of Human Biology, American Journal of Human Genetics, European Journal of Nuclear Medicine, Pediatrics, etc. All full text journals contained in this database are also indexed in MEDLINE. Biomedical Reference Collection: Basic Edition can be searched independently, but also allows users to conveniently link to full text from citations within MEDLINE. When the MEDLINE database is accessed via EBSCOhost, users may have the ability to link to full text for articles contained within the Biomedical Reference Collection: Basic Edition database. The majority of full text titles are available in native (searchable) PDF, or scanned-in-color. Full text information in this database dates as far back as 1985.

  • Cinahl Plus with FullText - Database of Nursing and Allied Health Literature is an index to English language nursing journals and journals in allied health disciplines CINAHL (Nursing & Allied Health) indexes the literature of nursing and allied health from 1982 to the present. Articles from more than 1000 journals are covered, as well as books, pamphlets, dissertations, audiovisuals, software, etc.
    Nursing disciplines include: Addictions. Ambulatory Care. Anesthesia. Burn. Camp. Cardiovascular. Community Health. Community Mental Health. Coronary Care. Correctional Health. Dermatology. Emergency. Enterostomal Therapy. Family Health. Flight. Forensic. Gastroenterology. Gerontologic. Geropsychiatric. Gynecologic. HIV-AIDS. Holistic. Home Nursing, Professional. Hospice Nursing Intravenous. Military. Maternal-Child. Medical-Surgical. Neonatal Intensive Care. Neonatal. Nephrology. Neuroscience. Nurse Midwifery. Obstetric. Occupational Health. Office. Oncologic. Opthalmic. Orthopedic. Otorhinolaryngology and Head-Neck. Parish. Pediatric Critical Care. Pediatric. Pediatric Oncology. Perianesthesia. Perinatal. Perioperative. Practical Nursing Private Duty. Psychiatric. Radiological. Rehabilitation. Respiratory. Rural Health. School Health. Surgical Nursing, Plastic. Trauma. Urologic.
    Allied health disciplines: Cardiopulmonary Technology. Dental Hygiene. Emergency Services. Medical/Laboratory Technology. The Medical Assistant. Medical Records. Nutrition & Dietetics. Occupational Therapy. Optometry. Podiatry. Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation. Physician Assistants. Radiologic Technology. Respiratory Therapy. Social Service in Health Care. Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology. Surgical Technology.
    Other subject areas: Biomedicine. Alternative/Complementary Medicine. Consumer Health. Health Sciences Librarianship

  • Health Source Plus (Nursing/Academic Edition) provides more than 550 scholarly full text journals, including nearly 450 peer-reviewed journals focusing on many medical disciplines. Also featured are abstracts and indexing for nearly 850 journals. Coverage of nursing and allied health is particularly strong, including full text from Creative Nursing, Issues in Comprehensive Pediatric Nursing, Issues in Mental Health Nursing, Journal of Advanced Nursing, Journal of Child & Adolescent Psychiatric Nursing, Journal of Clinical Nursing, Journal of Community Health Nursing, Journal of Nursing Management, Nursing Ethics, Nursing Forum, Nursing Inquiry, and many more. In addition, this database includes Clinical Pharmacology, which provides access to up-to-date, concise and clinically relevant drug monographs for all U.S. prescription drugs, hard-to-find herbal and nutritional supplements, over-the-counter products and new drugs. The majority of full text titles are available in native (searchable) PDF, or scanned-in-color. Full text information in this database dates as far back as 1975

  • Lexis Nexis Academic Universe - Medical section contains articles from medical & health news sources covering healthcare, articles from medical & health journals covering a wide range of medical topics and the National Library of Medicine's Medline database.

  • SciFinder Scholar
    SciFinder Scholar provides college students with quick and easy access to a wide diversity of research from many scientific disciplines. Faculty and students can explore:
    • CAS database content created by scientists
    • References from over 9,500 currently published journals and patent information from *more than 50 active patent issuing authorities
    • Important discoveries that span the scientific century back to 1900
    • The latest scientific breakthroughs almost as soon as they are published with references added daily and some patent information as recent as two days ago
    • Complete coverage of chemistry and the life sciences including biochemistry, biology, pharmacology, medicine, and related disciplines
    • The world's largest collection of organic and inorganic substance information


Databases with peer-reviewed search options enabled
Academic Search Premier
Under Limit Your Results, check the "Scholarly/Peer-Reviewed Journals" box on the main search screen

Biological and Agricultural Index
Under"limite to", check the "peer-revieweded" box.

CINAHL Plus with Full Text
Under Limit Your Results, check the "Peer-Reviewed" box on the main search screen

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Evaluating Sources

Evaluating the sources you find is a crucial step in the process of library research. You will need to determine whether or not a particular resource fits the requirements of your assignment.
How current is the information?
Is it scholarly?
Is this information from a reputable source?
Who is the author? What's his/her credentials?
How objective is the information?
How accurate or truthful?
How authoritative?

These sorts of questions help to establish a source's credibility, reliability, and usefulness.

Critically analyzing information sources from Cornell University Library, lists some of the critical questions you should ask when you consider the appropriateness of sources for your research.

Distinguishing scholarly from popular sources shows how to evaluate periodicals by looking at their format, intended audience, and appearance.

Check out more differences between scholarly and popular journals
http://www.ithaca.edu/library/course/periodical.html

A chart to help you to dertermine the characteristics of different types of periodicals. Remember to consult with your instructor about the type of sources appropriate for your assignment.

 
 
   
Citing Sources

It is important to give credit where credit is due. If an idea, fact, or concept within your lab report or paper is not yours, make an acknowledgement using a citation.

The Council of Science Editors scientific style of documentation is used in the biological sciences and many other fields of scientific study as well. It offers two approaches for documenting sources: 1) a citation/sequence system and, 2) a name/year system.

These resources can help you with your citations and references:

Scientific style and format : the CSE manual for authors, editors, and publishers (Reference Desk T11 .S386 2006) Published by the Council of Biology Editors.

CBE Documentation from the University of Wisconsin, which describes two systems of documentation, the citation-sequence system and the name-year system.

Council of Biology Editors (CBE) Style of Documentation in Science and Mathematics Guide prepared by Monroe Community College.

A tutorial from University of North Carolina University Library

EndNoteWeb is a Web-based research and writing tool that allows you to store citations, insert footnotes and create bibliographies. It is available through Web of Science. View oline tutorial

***Note that journal titles must be abbreviated in citations in CSE style. A list of journals and their abbreviations may be found at the Web of Science website. In addition, resources for journal abbreviations by discipline can be found in Scientific Style and Format in Appendix 29.1 (p. 569).

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UW-Parkside Library • P.O. Box 2000 • Kenosha, WI 53141 • (262)595-2360
Created 08/2004 by Qinghua Xu, liasion to Biological Sciences Department
Last Update: 08/26/08