User:UNZA/Searching Oxford University Press

About Oxford Journals
Over 160 leading titles in science, technology, medicine, humanities and social sciences.

Getting Started
Launch the browser. Add the following URL to start the Oxford Journals website : http//www.oxfordjournals.org.

Search techniques
There are three main search techniques that you can use to find information on the Internet.

Simple search:From the Oxford journals home page, type in your search term in the search bar.

Phrase search: To search for a phrase, put inverted comas around a phrase.
 * Type Information technology without quotation marks into the search query box. Notice the number of results
 * Type "Information technology" within quotation marks into the search query box. There is a significant decrease in the number of results.
 * If you want to have the search engine search the two words together as a phrase, you must put quotation marks around the words. (e.g. "Information technology").
 * Exact phrase searching is a way to get fewer and more useful results.

Boolean operators: This is where you use operators like AND, OR and NOT. These Boolean operators establish a relationship between the keywords/concepts in a search and thus modify the results from that search.


 * A searcher can specify that terms must appear in the items retrieved by using the AND operator.
 * Using the operator AND between keywords will limit the results of a search because all the keywords have to be present in order for an item to be retrieved.
 * Using the OR operator results in either or both of your search terms appearing in your results.
 * Using the OR operator will result in a larger number of retrieved items and therefore expands the search.
 * The NOT (or AND NOT) operator forbids the word after it from appearing in the items resulting from your search.
 * NOT or AND NOT thus narrows or limits a search by excluding the keyword immediately following it.