Skip to Main Content

Dietitian Education Program

Stay Organized

Brainstorm and jot down keywords for each part of your question. Try to think of every possible way an author/researcher might refer to your topics. Cross out words that aren't working and add to this list as you search.

Keep a search log or print your search histories. This will keep you from re-running the same searches and help you track how you've had to adjust your search.

Boolean Operators

This 4-minute tutorial explains how to use Boolean operators (AND, OR, and NOT) to build a search statement. (Click the YouTube "exapnd to full screen" button button in the bottom right to expand the tutorial to full screen.)

Search Tips

Use an asterisk (*) after the root of a word to search for variant endings. For example, stretch* will find stretching, stretch, stretches, etc.  This is called truncation.

Use quotation marks to keep words together as a phrase (e.g. "heart attack").

Look at the "help" menu in each database for more searching tips.

Search Terms: Keywords vs. Subject Headings

It is helpful to understand the difference between keywords and subject headings and the differences when searching with each.

Keywords

  • Keywords are any words that appear in the database record for an article, typically including the article title, abstract, journal title, subject terms, authors, author's affiliation, etc.
  • Before searching, brainstorm to come up with a list of keywords and phrases to describe your topic.
  • Searches using keywords are fast and easy and, for normal searches, may lead you to sufficiently relevant articles.
  • However, keyword searches will also retrieve articles that are not truly about the keyword search terms used; the terms may only be mentioned once in the article or may be used in a different context than you intended (e.g., AIDS will also retrieve articles on hearing aids, audiovisual aids, clinical aids, teaching aids, etc.)

Subject Headings/Terms

  • Subject headings/terms are standardized terms that are added to the database records of articles by professional indexers who have read each article to determine what each is truly about.
  • These standardized terms consolidate different words used to describe the same concept (e.g., teen, teens, teenager, adolescence, etc.) into one standardized term (e.g., Adolescent)
  • Subject headings/terms are called a variety of things, depending on the database: Descriptors, MeSH Terms (Medical Subject Headings), CINAHL Headings, Index Terms, Controlled Vocabulary, etc.
  • Searching by subject headings/terms will often yield a more focused set of results because your search is limited to the relevant subject(s)
  • Subject headings/terms are hierarchical, which makes broadening and narrowing a search much easier

I recommend that you try both types of searches. Start with keywords, notice the subject terms found in relevant results, and then use these subject terms to set up more focused searches.  There is no one-way to search; it is an iterative process, whereby you try one search, make discoveries which will further direct the next search, and so-on. Some searches may be all keywords, some all subject terms, and some a combination of both. Here's an example of a search in PubMed, that uses a Medical Subject Heading and a keyword phrase:

Weight loss [MeSH] AND Overweight [MeSH] AND "resistant starch"

Broaden or Narrow Your Search

When you can't find any or enough information or when the studies you're finding are of lower-than-ideal quality, try some of these tricks for broadening your search:

  • Try using synonyms for your original search terms
  • Explore related or broader topics (e.g., exercise therapy instead of stretching). Don't forget that you can refer to PubMed's or CINAHL's subject headings tree/hierarchy to see what the next broader term is
  • Remove less critical search terms from your search
  • Expand the date range and/or population
  • Consider doing a keyword search instead of subject heading search

When you are getting large numbers of results, try some of these tricks for narrowing your search:

  • Add additional search terms to your search statement using AND
  • Explore limit options or filters in the database (e.g., date range, publication types, age range, etc.)
  • Focus on a specific aspect of your broader question. Don't forget that you can search by subject term subheadings (e.g., adverse effects, rehabilitation, therapy, etc.).
  • If your initial search was a keyword search, try a subject heading search instead
  • Limit to articles where your subject headings are a "major" focus (using PubMed's MeSH Database or CINAHL's "CINAHL Headings" look-up)
  • If you are doing a keyword search, search for terms only in the Title or Abstract
© UAB Libraries ι University of Alabama at Birmingham ι About Us ι Contact Us ι Disclaimer