Research and Scholarly Journal Information |
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Research,
scholarly or peer reviewed journals are the most important sources of
information for many scholars. These journals do not publish an article
unless it is recommended by other scholars/experts. Often this recommendation
must be made blindly, without the reviewer knowing who the author is.
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Some indexes separate out scholarly journal articles: ProQuest
has a tab on the results screen that allows
searchers to view only these sources. CSA
also uses a tab (for example in PsycINFO and ERIC).
Others provide the information as a separate field: Education Abstracts
(and the other Wilson databases like WilsonSelectPlus ) provide peer-review
status within the article information. Use the limiter in the middle of the yellow search box
to find only peer reviewed articles. ERIC has had a field for items listed since 2004. See the CSA version of ERIC for more complete division by type of resource.
Ulrich's Periodicals Directory includes the information When
other options fail, Ulrich's
will give the status of currently published journals.
Many of the databases that provide this information get it from Ulrichs.
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These
are articles in which the author(s) are reporting the results of research
they have conducted. Although such articles usually appear in "research"
journals, they are one of several types of articles that such journals
routinely publish.
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Many indexes make this information available, but it is necessary to do a field search to use it in a search. Here are some examples (for similar information on other databases contact Reference staff): ERIC
in FirstSearch uses the Record Type
" reports research" Education
Abstracts does
not have a record type (and article type does not work) but they do use
"research"
as a subject heading (descriptor). PsycINFO
uses
the publication
types: "empirical study" "quantitative study" or
"qualitative
study." |