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Oral Communication - COMM 1000 - Lori Johnson

Adjusting the Publication Date (Getting to Recent Research)

Google Scholar ranks your results in part based on the number of times an article has been cited.  Since it takes a while for even the best research articles to accumulate a large number of citations this means that Google Scholar will tend to display older research.

Link to Google Scholar ... click on Cited by in Google Scholar to access articles that have cited this article

             

To adjust your results so that you can view results from a particular year - or so you can view the most recent research - use one of the date options found on the left-hand side of the page.

Link to Google Scholar ... change the dates on the Google Scholar results page to access more recent research

Google Scholar Search Techniques

It is possible to use the command  intitle:  in a standard Google Scholar search blank to limit certain words to the title while allowing other words to appear anywhere in the article.  Be sure that the term or phrase (which should be typed in quotes)  is entered immediately to the right of the colon in  intitle:

   

Example 1 - a search for an article that contains the phrase "mass media" in the title and also contains the word "China" somewhere else in the article:

     

Link to Google Scholar ... using intitle: to focus Google Scholar searches

 

    

Example 2 - a search for an article that contains the phrase "internet" in the title as well as the word "censorship" and also contains the phrase "Middle East" somewhere in the article:

Link to Google Scholar ... using intitle: to focus Google Scholar searches

Searching Cited by References (Snowball Forward)

Google Scholar provides a powerful way to search articles that have cited a favorite article.  Enter the title of a favorite article into Google Scholar then click on the "Cited by" option underneath the entry.
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Link to Google Scholar ... click on Cited by to access articles that cite the article you've found in Google Scholar.

 

 

Then be sure to check the Search within citing articles box.
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After clicking on Cited by - click on Search within citing articles to search the citing articles for a particular term

 

Then enter a concept and search all of the citing articles for that word.

After clicking on Cited by - check the box next to Search within citing articles to search the citing articles for a particular term