Definitions
Let's
define some terms that you will need to know when you look at
electronic databases.
- "Article": An article
is a relatively short piece appearing in a periodical (see next
definition) or newspaper.
It is non-fiction, meaning that it is not an imaginative work
telling a story about made-up characters. Rather, it deals
with facts and/or opinions about a particular subject--i. e., it is
an essay or report.
- "Periodical": A
periodical is a publication that comes out on a regular basis
more than daily--such as weekly, monthly, quarterly, annually, etc.
Although most newspapers come out daily, they are often lumped in with periodicals
(as in this tutorial).
- Journals vs. Magazines: These are two types of periodicals. Journals are intended for academic or
professional groups of readers, whereas magazines are meant for
popular audiences. Journals tend to have few or no advertisements,
and their articles cite sources in footnotes, while magazines are
advertising-driven and usually do not cite sources.
- "Full text": In electronic databases an article is described as "full
text" when the entire text of the
article is available right there on the computer screen. The
databases don't always contain the full text of articles;
sometimes there are only citations. See the next definition.
- "Citation": A citation is not the full text. But
a citation provides information about the article—author name,
article title, periodical title, page numbers, date published,
etc. What good is a citation? It enables you to look
for an article in print form (using
the library catalog) or in
another database (that comes later in this tutorial).
- "Abstract": An abstract is a summary of an article that
sometimes accompanies the full-text article or citation. The
abstract allows you to determine whether the article is worth
reading.
- "Subject" and "Keyword" Searches: There are important
differences between these two. Please check the definitions
of
subject search
and keyword search
in the glossary. (While you're there, feel free to
learn a little more about the other terms defined above.)
-
"Embargo": In the world of electronic databases of periodicals this term
refers to the practice of publishers whereby they hold back recent issues of the
print version of their periodicals from electronic databases. The reason
is that the immediate release of the publications to electronic databases would
reduce the sale of the print periodicals. Periodicals can be held back for
a period ranging from a week to over a year. Each database usually
provides information about the length of embargo for its publications.
Next we'll look in more detail at "Articles /
Databases."
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