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Google Tools f o r Scholars Do real scholars use Google? Yes, Google offers great search tools for journal articles and books. Highlighting Google Scholar and Google Book Search, this presentation will also introduce you to other helpful Google products for finding videos, images, blogs, and detailed maps. Presenters: Carolyn Radcliff Reference and Instruction Librarian Associate Professor Libraries and Media Services radcliff@kent.edu Jamie Seeholzer Reference and Instruction Librarian Instructor Libraries and Media Services jseeholz@kent.edu Google Book Search books.google.com Google Scholar scholar.google.com Google Videos video.google.com Google Images images.google.com Google Blogs blogsearch.google.com Google Maps maps.google.com Google Labs, for products in development: labs.google.com All Google products: www.google.com/intl/en/options You're invited to a presentation, "Google and the Future of Scholarship" by Jonathan Band, attorney for the Association of Research Libraries. Tuesday, March 20, 2007 at 4:00pm, Kent State Student Center room 319

Google Book Search books.google.com From the Google Book Search "About" page: What is Google Book Search? A tool that allows you to search the full text of books to find ones that interest you and learn where to buy or borrow them. How does Google Book Search work? Try a search on Google Book Search or on Google.com. When we find a book whose content contains a match for your search terms, we'll link to it in your search results. Clicking on a book result, you'll be able to see everything from a few short excerpts to the entire book, depending on a few different factors. What can I view? Each book includes an 'About this book' page with basic bibliographic data like title, author, publication date, length and subject. For some books you may also see additional information like key terms and phrases, references to the book from scholarly publications or other books, chapter titles and a list of related books. For every book, you'll see links directing you to bookstores where you can buy the book and libraries where you can borrow it. Full view: If we've determined that a book is out of copyright, or the publisher or rights holder has given us permission, you'll be able to page through the entire book from start to finish, as many times as you like. If the book is in the public domain, you'll also be able download, save and print a PDF version to read at your own pace. Limited preview: If a publisher or author has joined our Partner Program, you'll be able to see a few full pages from the book as a preview. You can conduct multiple searches within the book, or browse through the available pages (there's a limit to the amount of the book you can view online). Snippet view: Clicking on the book result, you'll be taken to the 'About this book' page. If you choose to search within the book, for each search term we'll display up to three snippets of text from the book, showing your search term in context. You can enter additional searches to help you decide whether you've found the right book. As always in Book Search, you'll see links to places where you can buy or borrow the book. No preview available: For books where we're unable to show you snippets, you'll see an 'About this book' page displaying bibliographic information about the book, plus links to help you find it in a bookstore or library. From Google Book Search: An Introduction: Why are there differences in what I can view? Broadly speaking, there are three types of books in Google Book Search: public domain books, in-print books, and out-of-print books. When Google Book Search was being developed, the easiest place to start was with public domain books. In the U.S., public domain books include those books published before 1923. After Google verifies that the book is in the public domain, they display the full text online. According to OCLC, public domain books only make up about 20 percent of books in the world. To include books that are still in copyright, Google developed the Google Books Partner Program to include books currently sold in bookstores. Copyright holders allow Google to display a "Limited Preview" so that you can browse a portion of the book. Still, books in copyright only make up about 5 percent of books, for the roughly 75 percent of books left there may be disputes over copyright rights or the book may be in the public domain but there is

no documentation to prove it. For these books, Google Book Search developed the basic bibliographic view and the snippet view. Where do these books come from? The books in Google Book Search come primarily from two sources: publishers and libraries. Publishers: Google Books Partner Program - An online book marketing program designed to help publishers and authors promote their books by showing you a limited number of pages as a preview. Libraries: Google Books Library Project - A project to include library collections in Google Book Search and make these books searchable and discoverable. Google Book Search shows useful information about the book, and in many cases, a few snippets a few sentences to display your search term in context. When a book is out of copyright, you can view or download it in its entirety. Library participants include: Princeton University of California Harvard University University of Michigan The New York Public Library Oxford University Stanford University What can I do once I've found a book I like? Browse: Click the forward-facing arrow to browse available pages. If you re in one-page mode, simply scroll down to see all available pages. You can also choose to view the book in full-screen mode (filling your browser window). Search within the book: Click on additional search results to see other pages containing your original search term, or try a new search within the book. Buy the book: Click on one of the links to online booksellers to go to directly to a page where you can buy the book. Find it in a library: Many books have Library Links. Look for the "Find this book in a library" link to find a local library that has a copy. Learn about the publisher: Click the publisher's logo to go to the publisher's website and find more books from that publisher. From Google Book Search "Help Center" page: Why can't I find "The Closet Organizer's Guide to the Universe"? Google Book Search is still a beta product, and is adding books every day. If you can't find a specific book, you may instead find similar ones that you didn't know existed. Try searching for the general information you want (as opposed to the title or author) in case other books contain what you're looking for. For example, searching for "organizing closets" will reveal a number of different books, from psychological approaches to life organization to volumes on cabinet-building. What about books in other languages? Google Book Search aims to include books from all the world's languages and cultures. All of the prestigious libraries Google Book Search is working with have books in many different languages, and they aren't limiting their scanning to English-language books. Google Book Search is currently working with publishers from many countries around the world to include their books in the Partner Program, and there are already many foreign-language versions of Google Book Search.

Google Scholar scholar.google.com ABBOUUTT GOOGGLLEE SCCHOLL AARR What is included in Google Scholar? Google says that Scholar includes scholarly literature, including peer-reviewed papers, conference papers, theses, book chapters, preprints, abstracts, and technical reports from all broad areas of research: Biology, Life Sciences, and Environmental Science Business, Administration, Finance, and Economics Chemistry and Materials Science Engineering, Computer Science, and Mathematics Medicine, Pharmacology, and Veterinary Science Physics, Astronomy, and Planetary Science Social Sciences, Arts, and Humanities Google Scholar may also include multiple versions of an article which you may be able to access. Where does Google get its content? According to Google, it draws from: a wide variety of academic publishers, professional societies, preprint repositories and universities, as well as scholarly articles available across the web. A sample of publishers that are included in Google Scholar: American Physical Society (APS), arxiv (e-print service in the fields of physics, mathematics, nonlinear science, computer science, and quantitative biology owned, operated and funded by Cornell University and NSF), Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), Blackwell, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), Institute of Physics, Nature Publishing Group, NASA, PubMed, Springer, Wiley Interscience How does it work? Google searches the web and uses an algorithm to determine if a web page or citation is "scholarly." Google also identifies material by extracting citations from articles. Google Scholar results are more narrow than regular Google results. A search for "educational assessment" in Google yields 844,000 web sites. A search for "educational assessment" in Google Scholar yields 9,400 documents. What do I need to know to use Google Scholar?! You should be knowledgeable about off-campus restrictions to some published materials and how you can access those materials by using the KSU proxy server.! You should be familiar with the OLINKS linking service.

What's the difference between Google Scholar and a research database such as Biological Abstracts or PsycINFO? This question is a challenge to answer because we know so little about what Google Scholar covers. It will help you identify hundreds or thousands of scholarly articles but may miss important studies. A comparison (one librarian's perspective): Google Scholar research databases easy to use """ " deep coverage " """ search options " """ multidisciplinary search "" " uses subject terms "" tracking who cites whom " " sorting results " """ exporting results " "" emailing, downloading results " For a comparison of Google Scholar to PsycINFO, take a look at this three-minute video from the UCLA libraries: http://www2.library.ucla.edu/googlescholar/searchengines.cfm USSIINGG GOOGG LLEE SCCHOLL AARR The Basic Search Use your knowledge of search strategies and Boolean operators to create an effective search. Examples: "educational assessment" "college students" OR undergraduates [in quotation marks to search as a phrase] [use upper case OR for synonyms] Topic: What are some ideas for using active learning strategies in the classroom? Search: "active learning" classroom Topic: What effect did the Exxon Valdez accident have on sea otters? Search: "Exxon Valdez" otters [These searches combine 2 concepts together for focused results. Google assumes you want to connect the 2 concepts together, so there is no need to type "and."] Other Searches (information taken from the Google Scholar "Help" Screen) by author Enter the author's name in quotations: "d knuth". To increase the number of results, use initials rather than the full first name. If you're finding too many papers which mention the author, you can use the "author:" operator to search for specific authors. For example, you can try [author:knuth], [author:"d knuth"], or [author:"donald e knuth"]. by title Put the paper's title in quotations: "A History of the China Sea." Google Scholar will automatically find the paper as well as other papers which mention it.

finding recent research on a particular topic Just click on "Recent articles" on the right side of any results page, and your results will be re-sorted to help you find newer research more quickly. The new ordering considers factors like the prominence of the author's and journal's previous papers, as well as the full text of each article and how often it has been cited. date restrict (This option is only available on the Advanced Scholar Search page.) Date-restricted searches can be effective when you're looking for the latest developments in a given area. You can enter a range of years along with your keywords. Bear in mind, however, that some web sources don't include publication dates, and a date-restricted search will not return articles for which Google Scholar was unable to determine a date of publication. searching for papers in specific publications (This option is only available on the Advanced Scholar Search page.) A publication-restricted search only returns results with specific words from a specific publication. For example, if you want to search the Journal of Finance for articles about mutual funds, you might search for "mutual funds" as a keyword, and "journal of finance" in the publication field. Keep in mind, however, that publication-restricted searches may be incomplete. Google Scholar gathers bibliographical data from many sources, including automatically extracting it from text and citations. This information may be incomplete or even incorrect; many preprints, for instance, don't say where (or even whether) the article was ultimately published. In general, publication-restricted searches are effective if you're certain of what you're looking for, but they re often narrower than you might expect. For instance, you might find that a search across all publications for [mutual funds] gives more useful results than a more specific search for "funds" only in the Journal of Finance. Finally, bear in mind that one journal can be spelled several ways (e.g., Journal of Biological Chemistry is often abbreviated as J Biol Chem), so you may need to try several spellings of a given publication in order to get complete search results. searching by category From the Advanced Search page, you can search for scholarly literature within seven broad areas of research. Simply check the boxes for the subject areas you're interested in searching. Viewing the Results Click on the main results. You may be led to the web site of a publisher, scholar, organization. You might see a fuller citation, an abstract, or possibly the full article or book chapter. What does the Related Articles link do? For each Google Scholar search result, we try to automatically determine which articles in our index are most closely related to it. You can see a list of these articles by clicking the "Related Articles" link that appears next to many results. The list of related articles is ranked primarily by how similar these articles are to the original result, but also takes into account the relevance of each paper. Finding sets of related papers and books is often a great way for novices to get acquainted with a topic. However, we've found that even experts can sometimes be surprised to discover related work in their area of expertise. Why are there author names on the left hand side of my results page? We automatically suggest authors related to your query just click on an author's name and you'll see their papers. Finding authors who publish on the topics you're interested in is often a great way to get better acquainted with a field and discover related work you may not have found otherwise.

A Google Scholar search provides a link to a journal article that has been cited 21 times. What does this mean? This means that 21 other Google resources (web sites, articles, book chapters, reports, etc.) have cited the article. There is no correlation between the number of times the article was cited in other scholarly journals and the Google citation number. The Social Sciences Citation Index, Science Citation Index, and Arts & Humanities Citation Index (also known as Web of Science) would be better sources for this. Finding the full-text of the document if it is not available on Google Scholar Look for options for "Find it with OLINKS" or "OhioLINK OLINKS" OLINKS is a linking service provided by OhioLINK. It will lead you to the full text of any article that is in OhioLINK collections, including the Electronic Journal Center, JSTOR, and others. OLINKS will also show you if a book is available at your library or any other OhioLINK library. If there is no "OLINKS" option, try "Library Search," which may take you to Kent State's own library catalog. If you still cannot find a link to full text, search for the journal title in Kent State's "E-Journal Finder" (to look for an online versi``on) or in KentLINK (to look for a print version). When in doubt, ask a librarian! reference desk, first floor; 330-672-3150; IMaKSULibrarian (chat screen name) Exporting Google Scholar Results You can export from Google Scholar to several different bibliographic management services. 1. Go to Google Scholar 2. Click on the Scholar Preferences link to the right of the Scholar search box. 3. Scroll to the bottom of the Scholar Preferences page, and in the 'Bibliography Manager' section, click the radio button next to 'Show link to import citations into' and choose the citation manager format you prefer: BibTeX, EndNote, RefMan, etc. 4. Click the "Save Preferences" button. That's it! Next time you do a Scholar search, you'll see a link next to each search result that says 'Import into RefWorks' (or whatever format you specified). Clicking on the link will open a file pre-formatted for your bibliography manager. NOTE: This method allows exporting of only ONE citation at a time. Librarians Monica Anderson and Katie Newman from Univ. of Illinois Urbana Champaign offer directions for importing multiple citations from Google Scholar in to RefWorks, with the help of a Firefox add-in: http://www.library.uiuc.edu/refworks/import_instructions.htm#googlescholar (See the "second way.") [We have not tried this yet so we can't say how well it works.]

Google Scholar Sample Searrcchess 1. Go to scholar.google.com 2. Type in: "active learning" SEARCH How many results? 3. Change the search to look for the keywords only in titles: Go to Advanced Scholar Search. Use the pull-down menu for "where my words occur." Choose "in the title of the article" SEARCH 4. Focus the results by adding another concept: Type the word classroom in the search box. SEARCH How many results? 5. On the results page, click on "Recent articles." (Notice the new pull-down menu next to the search box.) VIEW RESULTS Look at the second item: BRIEF Using Active Learning to Transform the Monte Hall Problem into an Invaluable Classroom. The link will take you to the full article, probably because we're on campus and this source is included in the list of proxied resources Look at the third item: Ubiquitous presenter: fast, scalable active learning for the whole classroom. The link will take you to the full article, probably because we're on campus and this source is included in the list of proxied resources. [Note that this is a one-page article.] Look at the seventh item: Taking Back the Law School Classroom: Using Technology to Foster Active Student Learning. The link will take you to the article -- but is it the final published version? Go back and choose the "OhioLINK OLINKS" option. This will show you that we have this article in print. Look at the eighth item: Creating Active Learning in the Classroom: A Systematic Approach. The link will take you to the publisher web site. Go back and choose "Find it with OLINKS" to get the full text of the article. Once you've identified a document that you want, obtaining it may be tricky. Ask a librarian for assistance: reference desk, first floor; 330-672-3150; IMaKSULibrarian (chat screen name) BIBLIOGRAPHY MANAGER Go to Scholar Preferences. Scroll to the bottom of the Scholar Preferences page, and in the 'Bibliography Manager' section, click the radio button next to 'Show link to import citations into' and choose the citation manager format you prefer: RefWorks. Click the "Save Preferences" button. That's it! The next search you do will offer an option to export to your preferred bibliographic management program.

A Quick Look at Some Other Google Products Google Images images.google.com Search for: Alaska tsunami 1964 Google Videos Search for: video.google.com Tacoma bridge Google Blogs Search for: blogsearch.google.com new york fashion week Google Maps Search for: maps.google.com donuts (for morning session) pizza (for afternoon session)