Web of Science provides access to leading scholarly literature in the sciences, social sciences, and, to a lesser extent, the arts and humanities. The database includes proceedings of international conferences, symposia, seminars, colloquia, workshops, and conventions. Click this link to access Web of Science.
In the search box, type in your keyword search terms. For instance, if your topic is Separation of dairy cow from calf, you can use keyword search terms cow AND calf AND separation. You can sort the results using the following options:
- Citations
- Citations displays the total number of times a published work was cited by other works.
- Usage
- The Usage is a measure of the level of interest in a specific item on the Web of Science platform. The count reflects the number of times the article has met a user’s information needs.
- Relevance
- Relevance sorts records in descending order based on a ranking system that considers how many of the search terms are found in each record. Relevance ordering for source records takes into account the following fields-Title, Abstract, Keywords, and Keywords Plus.
Click the number next to Times Cited to view all the other articles that cited this particular article. Click Full Text from Publisher
to retrieve the full-text article from the publisher’s site, or Find It
to retrieve the article from U of I Library’s catalog.
Citation Chaining
Citation chaining is a research technique in which you use one source to find related documents.
There are two types of citation chaining:
- Forward Chaining - Starting with one work and looking at the works that have cited the current work as a reference.
- Backward Chaining - Looking at what documents the current work cites and then following those backward by looking at the documents they cite.
In a Web of Science record, you can click Citations
for forward chaining and References
for backward chaining.