1 / 17

Researching on the Internet

Researching on the Internet. When in doubt just Google-It!. Search Engines / Directories. Search Engines come in all colors (bias) and sizes (speed)

plato-diaz
Download Presentation

Researching on the Internet

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Researching on the Internet When in doubt just Google-It! Jim DeCosta ADM Humphreys College

  2. Search Engines / Directories • Search Engines come in all colors (bias) and sizes (speed) • Some limit their search to specific servers, which host very specific types of information – If you know which engines do what and if you are often looking for a specific type of data then you’ll want to bookmark a few of these. • Some use “spiders” to seek out html document headers, which usually contain key-words that describe content. – Helps the engine serve up many pages quickly, but leaves out tons of good information from reputable sources who publish on their own and are not all that concerned about the masses finding their sites or they simply don’t take the time to add the key-words to the headers of their pages. • Others search deep into the web, looking not only at the headers but the hundred’s of millions of pages as well. Google is an engine of this type. The problems associated with this type of search is that it often pulls up so much information it takes a real expert to limit the search to those valuable sites you are looking for.

  3. The Problem with Search Engines and the Web • The web is not indexed • Therefore there is no one central place (like a library card catalog) where information can be organized about location. • Search Engines return thousands of “hits” per search • Talk about finding a needle in the haystack!

  4. Two Things You Must Do • Have a clear understanding of how to prepare your search. • You must identify the main concepts in your topic. • Determine any synonyms, alternate spellings, variant word forms for the topic. • Know how to use the various search tools available on the Internet. • Search Engines: Alta-Vista, Google • Directories: Yahoo, WWW Virtual Library

  5. Subject Directories – Good for finding General Information on popular or scholarly subjects. • A subject directory is a catalog of sites collected and organized by humans. • Subject directories are often called subject "trees" because they start with a few main categories and then branch out into subcategories, topics, and subtopics. • To find the homepage for the Los Angeles Dodgers at Yahoo!, for example, select "Recreation & Sports" at the top level, "Sports" at the next level, "Baseball" at the third level, "Major League Baseball" at the fourth level, "Teams" at the fifth level, then finally “Los Angeles Dodgers."

  6. Some Popular Directories

  7. Spiders and Bots Spiders and Robots – Crawling around those telephone, cable lines and microwave transmissions from satellites…. Uhk!!

  8. Search Engine Techniques • You have broken down your topic into key words and synonyms. • Topic = UFOs • ufo • Flying saucer • Area 51 • Missing time • Aliens • Close encounters • Unidentified aircraft

  9. Before you begin the search • If you are new to search engine use • Read the main page for instructions • Most engines have help links or links to advanced searching procedures. Read, re-read, and read again. • There is no substitute for reading, although the web has grown to be quite the audio-visual show place, the vast majority of information still requires that you read with comprehension.

  10. Use of Boolean Terms • Uses Boolean operators (and, or , not) to specify desired results.  AND narrows, OR broadens, NOT excludes. Some search tools use plus (+) and minus (-) marks instead of AND & NOT. • AND • Tells search engines to look for both or all of the search terms. “UFO and alien and area 51” will return only pages where all three are mentioned. • OR • Tells search engines to look for either search term. “UFO OR Alien” will return pages in which UFO and Alien appear, as well as pages in which UFO or Alien appear alone on the page.

  11. Phrase Searching • Surrounding text with quotes will order the search engine to find pages that contain exactly what is typed between them. • “can use guys find the wetering bukit” will find only pages that contain the phrase as spelled; so….. Check your spelling! • Combine Phrase Searching with Boolean Terms or implied Boolean (+/-). • “World Series” AND Dodgers • +“World Series” + Dodgers • Note – implied Boolean requires that a + or – appear before the phrase also.

  12. Letter and Case Interpretation • Most search engines will interpret lower case letters as either lower case or capitals. • If you desire both upper and lower case returned, then type your request in lower case. • If you want to limit your search then you can use capital letters “Albert Einstein” or “EMS”. • Like capital letters, most search engines will interpret singular case as singular or plural. • “dog” will return dog, dogs, Dogs, Dog, DOGS, and DOG. • You can use the plural form to limit your search; DOGS will return DOGS.

  13. Truncation – Excellent for those who were too lazy to look up proper spelling. • Several Search engines support truncation; which is the use of wild cards in your search term. • Common wildcards are *, ?, and # • To search for all pages containing the letters “ear”, if you entered “*ear* you would get pages that contained, pear, ear, ears, pears, hear, hears, dear, dears, etc. • The * allows anything to precede or follow from your inquiry. • The ? Is a single letter holder; thus querying “l?st” returns list, lost, last, etc. • # is used as a numerical version of ?.

  14. Search For Use

  15. Multiply Your Searching PleasureUse Meta-Search Engines • Meta-search engines search several major engines at once. • Meta-Search engines act as brokers or middlemen for other online search engines. • Different search engines return different results based on the information their spiders and bots have collected. • Utilizing a Meta-Search engine can be a quick way of determining which search engine is retrieving the most relevant hits for your particular search effort.

  16. Popular Meta-Search Engines • DOGPILE • searches 8 search engines and subject directories as well as newsgroups, business news, and newswires. Dogpile supports full Boolean logic and phrase searching. • VIVISIMO • clusters results from 8 search engines and subject directories into convenient topic categories. Use implied Boolean logic (+/-) and phrase searching. • METACRAWLER • submit queries to 7 search engines and subject directories. Use implied Boolean logic (+/-) and phrase searching.

  17. SPECIALTY DATABASESSpecialty databases are dedicated to collecting relevant sites for a particular subject • Findlaw – Targets Legal Resources • Achoo! collects health and medical sites. • Beaucoup lists more than 1,200 engines, directories, and indices from around the world. • Price's Direct Search links to a wide variety of business, government, humanities, legal, news, and science databases. • Search.com, search more than 100 specialized databases.

More Related