When conducting college-level research, there is a general process to follow:
Research Process
- Select topic
- Use Boolean logic to expand or narrow key concepts or keywords
- Select a database
- Evaluate and revise search strategy
- Choose items and find full-text online or in print
Since you have already selected your topic, this guide will focus on the other aspects of the research process. Ideally, you chose a topic that you were somewhat familiar with or is interested in conducting research on. To get more information and ideas on the food that you selected, use Google, Wikipedia, the Encyclopedia of Life, or IUCN Redlist. Note that you can’t cite a Wikipedia article or most of the websites from a Google search. You can, however, find some keywords that you can use or some peer-reviewed literature (references at the bottom of a Wikipedia article, for instance) and other linked sources to gray literature and scholarly literature.
What are the differences among popular, scholarly, and gray literature? Below are the characteristics of each source that can help you differentiate from others:
- Popular/General Interest Magazine (news, media, magazines)
- Shorter articles with broad overviews of topics
- Published to inform, entertain, or persuade
- Possibly a “suggested reading” list, usually no bibliography
- Authors are often journalists or staff writers; No credentials are provided
- Articles are not evaluated by experts in the field, but by editors on staff
- Scholarly Journals (peer-reviewed or refereed)
- Longer articles, providing in-depth analysis of topics
- Publish original research in a field
- Bibliography provided to document research
- Authors are usually experts or specialists in the field; Names and credentials are always provided
- Articles are reviewed and evaluated by experts in the field (refereed)
- Gray Literature (bulletins, trade journals, science communications, gov’t reports)
- Long or short, depending on intended audience
- Published through the government, organizations, institutes, and interest groups; Often original research
- Bibliographies usually provided
- Authors are usually experts or specialists in the field; Names and credentials are always provided
- Articles are often written by experts, but are mostly not peer-reviewed; In some cases, e.g. federal agencies, they may have internal peer-review
Now let’s talk about Boolean logic.
Boolean Logic
Boolean logic uses Boolean operators (such as AND
, OR
, NOT
) to narrow, expand, or define a search, and is applicable to conducting searches in library catalog and most databases. Writing out your search terms using Boolean operators by connecting pieces of information and coming up with synonyms is a good exercise as it can show wanted results and filter out unrelated results. Below are some of the most common Boolean operators you can use:
Boolean Operator | Explanation | Example |
---|---|---|
AND | Each result contains all search terms | banana AND production |
" " | Results must include search terms in the defined order | "vegetable oil" |
OR | Each result contains at least one search term | "vegetable oil" OR crisco |
NOT | Results do not contain the specified terms | "packaged chicken" NOT "whole chicken" |
* | Results can include search terms with different endings of the root word | avocado* [for avocado and avocados] |
? | Results include words with alternative spellings | “pasteuri?ed milk” [for pasteurised milk and pasteurized milk] |
( ) | Results include the phrase with the order of relationships organized | ("white sugar" OR "brown sugar") NOT "liquid sugar" |
You can check out this research guide to learn more about Boolean logic.