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Google Scholar F18
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Published on Nov 29, 2015
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PRESENTATION OUTLINE
1.
Google Scholar
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clemsonunivlibrary
2.
Johns Hopkins Sheridan Libraries
asklib@jhu.edu
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🇸🇮 Janko Ferlič
3.
GOAL: To better understand how Google Scholar works and how it can be used for research.
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ekkebus
4.
Tonight
What is a scholarly source
How does Google Scholar search?
Searching Google Scholar
Google Scholar and Metrics
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anarchosyn
5.
How do you know that a source is "scholarly?"
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Daniel Y. Go
6.
Scholarly Source:
Peer-reviewed journal articles are written by scholars or professionals who are experts in their fields and the articles are reviewed by other experts in said field.
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Daniel Y. Go
7.
Also, a book written by a scholar, and reviewed by other scholars before publication.
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Daniel Y. Go
8.
What are some examples of scholarly sources that you know of, or have used for classes or your research?
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Daniel Y. Go
9.
How Google Scholar Works
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drubuntu
10.
Besides scholarly sources, what else does Google Scholar have?
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Jill Clardy
11.
Types of Sources
articles and books
citations and abstracts
technical reports
court opinions
patents
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Jill Clardy
12.
Rankings
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Roberto_Ventre
13.
Ranks the same way Google does with an additional algorithm for "scholarly" sources
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Roberto_Ventre
14.
Basis for Ranking
Full Text of the article
The Author
The Publication
# of times Cited
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Leo Reynolds
15.
Things to Consider
Articles appear more than once
Ranking of articles may change overnight
Relevancy rankings can not be resorted by date
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matthewgriff (EmmGee)
16.
Searching Google Scholar
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Jeffrey Beall
17.
Let's Search!
Try a search in Google Scholar
Return to Adobe Connect, use the Agree button to let us know that you are done.
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mikecogh
18.
Automatic Searching:
Results are ranked by relevance
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Rob Ellis'
19.
New Articles
Since Year: re-sorts articles chronologically and by relevance
Sort By Date: re-sorts by newest only
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Knterox
20.
Filter your search
Sort by Year
Sort by Date
What was different?
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aftab.
21.
Tip: Saving a Search
Click the envelope to have new results delivered via email
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401(K) 2013
22.
Link the Library
Settings
Library Links
Search for: Johns Hopkins
Add Library
Look for FindIt@JHU
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RichGrundy
23.
Tip: Similar Results
Click "Related Articles" Or "Cited By"
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VinothChandar
24.
Advanced Search: Search by...
Boolean Operator equivalents
Author
Publication
Date
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Leo Reynolds
25.
Try It
Link the library
Look at similar results and cited by features
Conduct an Advanced Search
Use the Agree button in Adobe to let u know when you're done.
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cobalt123
26.
Metrics
Gauging visibility and influence
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quinn.anya
27.
You can browse the top 100 publications ordered by their five-year h-index and
h-median metrics
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brianjmatis
28.
H5-Index: It is the largest number h such that h articles published in 2013-2017 have at least h citations each.
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SanFranAnnie
29.
I.E.
A publication with 3 articles cited 20,16, 8, and 6 times respectively has an h-index of 6
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96dpi
30.
Things to note:
Metrics covers articles from 2010 to 2015 inclusive
Metrics are based on citations from June 2015
Metrics only include publications with 100 or more articles
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Rameshng
31.
H5-Median
The median of the # of citations from the h5-index
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HeyThereSpaceman.
32.
Browse Metrics
First locate your subject in the Metrics Categories
Find the top publication
Find your publication's H5-index
Enter the name of the publication and the H5-index in the poll.
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Bill Liao
33.
Metrics
Some words of caution...
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chunghow33
34.
Metrics
Take all metrics with some salt
Not all metrics are created equal
No single metric can give you an accurate assessment of a single source/author/journal/etc
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chunghow33
35.
GOAL: To better understand how Google Scholar works and how it can be used for research.
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ekkebus
36.
Google Guide
guides.library.jhu.edu/find/google
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WilliamMarlow
37.
Untitled Slide
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Stefan Baudy
JHU SOE Librarians
Haiku Deck Pro User
http://library.jhu.edu
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