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Google Me This, Batman!. Maureen Pettitt, Ph.D. Skagit Valley College. Did you know?. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cL9Wu2kWwSY. Making the Most of Search Terms. What is the population of Mount Vernon, WA?. mount vernon = 11,400,000 results
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Google Me This, Batman! Maureen Pettitt, Ph.D. Skagit Valley College
Did you know? • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cL9Wu2kWwSY
What is the population of Mount Vernon, WA? • mount vernon = 11,400,000 results • Every web page that Google has indexed that includes the words mount or vernon • mount vernon washington = 2,360,000 • Every webpage that it has indexed that includes the words mount or vernon or washington
“mount vernon washington” = 129,000 results • Instead of returning pages that include mount, vernon, or washington, using quotes will yield only pages that include the entire phrase that you put in quotes • Notice that the results still includes sites about George & Martha’s estate in Virginia
(Notice that not too far down the list is the Wikipedia webpage…) • What happens if we reverse the state and city name? • “washington mount vernon” = 212,000; with all the top hits being George & Martha’s place • If we add population to “mount vernon washington” we get 12,400 results • with the population of the city the first result (from Wikipedia no less!)
Adding more search terms • Using the plus sign • Add +census to the search; the result is 622 • A plus sign forces pages to include the term after the “+” • If we want to exclude Wikipedia (Batman wants us to do so) • Add a minus sign in front of the term you want to eliminate • –wikipedia • There are now 517 results
If we only want census pages, click on Advanced Search and add census.gov to the “Search within a site or domain field” Holy Joy Hog, Batman! We narrowed the search down to 54 results from our original 11.4 million!
A Short Cut • If you are wanting only government web sites, add “*.gov” to your search terms, but note that this can broaden rather than reduce your results! • Your government is clearly here to help… • …and obviously a wildcard!
Molasses Disaster • Molasses Disaster gets us 1, 570,000 results • Searching for “molasses disaster” (with quotes ) reduced the number to 68,800 • “molasses disaster” + Boston = 47,200 • Adding “edu” in Advanced Search under domain = 792 results
Other Useful Stuff • Dictionary Definitions • Median • Whippersnapper • Images • Whippoorwill • Synonym Search • ~ • Calculations, conversions, flight status, package tracking, movies, get address from a phone number, people search, etc.
Similar to using ProQuest or EBSCOhost, but is available when you can’t get to those resources, or want to supplement your search
Features • Scholar Preferences • Specify language, library, number of results, or bibliography mgr (i.e., EndNotes) • Advanced Search • Specify author/subject information, publication, dates
My Go-To Advanced Search:Author Search Advanced Search Tips: • The search [friedman regression] returns papers on the subject of regression written by people named Friedman. If you want to search on an author's full name, or last name and initials, enter the name in quotes: ["jh friedman"].
When a word is both a person's name and a common noun, you might want to use the "author:" operator. This operator only affects the search term that immediately follows it, and there must be no space between "author:" and your search term. • For example:[author:flowers] returns papers written by people with the name Flowers, whereas [flowers -author:flowers] returns papers about flowers, and ignores papers written by people with the name Flowers (a minus in front of a search term excludes results that contain this search term).
You may use the operator with an author's full name in quotes to further refine your search. Try to use initials rather than full first names, because some sources indexed in Google Scholar only provide the initials. • For example: To find papers by Donald E. Knuth, you could try [author:"d knuth"], [author:"de knuth"], or [author:"donald e knuth"].