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CHEM 457/557: Organic Synthesis

Getting Started

This guide will introduce you to some resources useful for your upcoming research project. You can find even more more useful resources on the Chemistry subject guide or these other guides below.

Ways to Search

  1. KEYWORD.  Try different and related terms:  "drug development", "drug design", "drug discovery" , "drug target"
  2. AUTHOR.  Researchers tend to specialize, so look for other articles written by an author whose article you found useful. In resources like Google Scholar and Scopus, you can look for author profiles
  3. SUBJECT HEADING.  See what words the indexer used to categorize a useful article; click that category to find other articles that have been similarly tagged.  
  4. CITATIONS.  Look at the bibliography of a scholarly article and find the sources it used. Recent review articles (especially systematic reviews) are great sources to get a sense of the state of the art on a topic and to mine for more articles. 
  5. CITED BY. Use Scopus or Google Scholar to see more recent articles that have cited a useful source. If those authors found it useful too, you might like the authors' article.
  6. SPECIALIZED FEATURES. Specialized chemistry databases like Scifinder and Reaxys will allow you to search by structure and reaction, find property data, search current patents, and more  

Finding Articles and Info - Best Bets

In the sciences, we have access to two different kinds of search engines:

Subject Databases.  Companies like EBSCO and ProQuest work with thousands of publishers to index their articles and put them into subject databases and specialized subject databases like PubMed focus on particular areas like the biomedical literature.  PRO: More article records, more sophisticated searching available because of indexing  CON: Some records do not have full text.

Publisher Aggregates.  Publishers of scientific journals tend to specialize in that area, so you can search for your topic in a particular publisher and be pretty sure you'll be looking mostly at scholarly, scientific articles.  PRO: Articles will be full text (dates depend on our subscription).  CON: Searching is usually limited to keywords.