Exhibition Reviews
1. RefWorks: Getting Started2. Saving citations with RefWorks3. Getting organized with RefWorks4. More About Citation Management
This is the "Search Techniques" page of the "Impressionism: Avant-Garde Rebellion in Context (FA 155A)" guide.
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Impressionism: Avant-Garde Rebellion in Context (FA 155A)  

Course LibGuide created for Professor Nancy Scott by Darwin Scott, Assistant Director for Research and Instruction Services, Creative Arts and Humanities, and Lisa Zeidenberg, Arts & Culture Librarian.
Last Updated: Feb 15, 2012 URL: http://brandeis.libguides.com/impressionism Print Guide RSS UpdatesShareThis

Search Techniques Print Page
  Search: 
 

Boolean Logic

 

Search Tips

  • Remember to enclose search phrases in quotes:

"monet in normandy"

This ensures that the database will return results that include the entire phrase

"monet in normandy"

rather than records that contain both of these words, but not your search phrase:

records that include the word "monet" and the word "normandy" but not the phrase "monet in normandy"

Doing this will help you avoid sifting through irrelevant results.

  • To search for more than one variant of a term, use truncation:

exhibit* will search for

exhibit, exhibits, exhibition and exhibitions

The database searches for any word that begins with the letters that precede the truncation symbol (in this case, an asterisk). Some databases use other symbols, such as a question mark, for truncation.

  • Begin with a keyword search of your topic:

monet and exhibition?

and note the related subject headings that come up in relevant results:

Monet, Claude, 1840-1926 -- Exhibitions.

  • You can also expand your search by including a related term in an "or" search with your first term:

ex. color or colour 

See the box on Boolean Logic for more about this search technique.

  • If the database you are searching allows you to specify a search field (i.e. keyword, subject, author, title etc.), then you can search these fields as long as you know that the term you're using appears in that index.

For example, you might begin with a keyword search for monet and exhibition? but find that the database lists "Monet, Claude, 1840-1926-- Exhibitions" as a subject heading. By searching for "Monet, Claude, 1840-1926 -- Exhibitions" as a subject in this particular database, you ensure that every one of your results treats Monet's exhibitions as a subject.

If you search for the keywords monet and exhibition? in this database, you might find records among your results where both Monet and exhibitions are mentioned but Monet's exhibitions are not the main topic of the article or book. Sometimes you may want to look at these records too, so consider keyword searching in addition to searching the subject or other index fields.

Lisa Zeidenberg

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Academic Outreach Librarian for Creative Arts
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Main Library, Farber Level 2
781-736-4697
lzeidenb@brandeis.edu
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