This guide is your introduction to the resources at Auraria
Library. It points to the best tools to find books and journal
articles on your topic. Keep in mind that the reference
librarians are here to help. If you can't find what you
need, ask for help!!
Getting started - the research
topic
Your research question is the key to reducing frustration and stress. It needs to be well-focused and specific. The Auraria Library offers great resources for finding and researching your topic. You can search Skyline for subject encyclopedias and browse the current periodicals area to see what other researchers are doing. You can also search databases such as PubMed to identify recent medical research in conditions associated with stress.
Tip: In the discussion section of many research articles, the author proposes further areas of inquiry. Also, when you're searching topics in PubMed and find a promising article, try clicking the "related articles" link to the right of the citation.
Quick help
| To
find: |
Look
in: |
| |
| Books/e-books/links
to journals in or available through the Auraria Library |
Skyline |
| Where &
in what form articles from a specific journal are available and where are
the articles most likely to be available full text online |
Skyline |
| What database
indexes a journal in my topic |
Gold
Rush |
| What databases
include articles on my topic |
Library
subject guides |
| Books/e-books/links
to journals in other major Front Range libraries |
Prospector |
| Books/e-books/journal
titles in libraries worldwide, including your local
university or college library |
WorldCat |
Background info on your
topic
Reference books such as specialized encyclopedias and
dictionaries are great for finding out just what you need
to support your thesis or collect background material for
your research. You can search Skyline
using your term and combine it with terms like encyclopedias
or handbooks to pull up specialized encyclopedias (example:
aging and encyclopedias). This also applies to "dictionaries"
and "video".
- Encyclopedia of aging, in the Library at REF HQ1061 .E534 2002
- Encyclopedia of gerontology : age, aging, and the aged, in the Library at REF
RC952.5 .E58 1996
- The
American Heritage® Dictionary, 4th Edition, or
in the Library at REF PE1628 .A6227 2002
- Merriam-Webster Online, or in the Library at REF PE1628 .M36 1998b
- InfoPlease.com,
at the Desk Reference in the Library at REF HF5003
.I5
To find books in Skyline, you might try a subject search for your research topic (say, stress and aging). This gives you a list of subject categories related to the topic and the number of books that are associated with each.
Tip: Many subject categories appear if you type the word "aging" into the subject search. If you type "aging physiolog*," you'll find more relevant books. You can further narrow the search using the Limit/Sort Search button - . Try limiting to more current publications (1990 and later) or narrow your subject search in a different narrower topic (e.g., "geriatric cardiology ").
Note: The author, Augustine G. DiGiovanna, of the textbook you are using has a companion website at http://www.biologyofhumanaging.com/. It contains titles of many books and websites to explore.
Auraria Library's Online
Resources and Databases
Article Databases and Indexes
You can search for articles using online databases
or indexes. Many
provide the full text of the article while some databases
display a link to Library holdings (Skyline)
or a full text search.
Finding articles that are not
full text online. Many scholarly journal articles
are not full text online. Others may be available full text,
but not through PubMed or Medline. Use Skyline to determine availability of the article. Some journals are only available online, these will be indicated in Skyline (example: Immunity and Ageing and Biogerontology). Other journals are only available
in the Library. These are
on the first floor Periodicals area.
- Journal title search in Skyline -
local journal holdings and available online full
text of the journal.
- interlibrary loan - If
the Llibrary does not have access to the article, use InterLibrary Loan (ILL) to request a copy. The article will
be mailed to you.
Some specifics
- Identify the title of the journal. Do not
confuse the journal title with the title of the article.
- Search Skyline
by Journal title (also see thesearch box on the Library
homepage). If Auraria Library has the journal, a record
will appear that shows complete information (status, location,
call number, format). If we don't have it, go to the next
step.
- Request the article through interlibrary loan form (ILLiad).
This works really well, they email you the article for
free. The downside is that it might take
longer if it is a hard to find article. So, give yourself time. If you don't have
the time, go to Prospector and determine which library,
if any, owns the journal. You can go to that library
and make a copy of that article. Remember there is an excellent special collection in Denver at the Health Sciences Library of UCD on the Anschutz Medical Campus in east Denver (directions).
eBooks Electronic
books that you can read on your computer. Find eBooks owned
by Auraria Library by using Skyline.
(To read NetLibrary books from off-campus: sign up for
a NetLibrary account from anywhere on campus. If you live
outside the Denver Metro area email the
distance support librarian.) Use the eBooks
subject guide to locate other sources of eBooks. Click here for
a few relevant eBooks found through Skyline (available in
NetLibrary).
Non-Auraria Library Resources
If you start your research with non-Library resources (like
the internet or other libraries) you may become frustrated
because you can't access the whole article, or be allowed
to check out the book. So when you find a resource somewhere
other than through the Library, try to locate it through
us before you buy it or give up. (See Finding
... ) It could be at Auraria Library (Skyline),
in one of our proprietary databases, in a local library from which we can easily borrow
it for you (Prospector),
or in some other U.S. library from which we can borrow it
for you (interlibrary loan
and WorldCat).
In any library Look
for information on gerontology and aging in your local university,
special or public library. Try browsing in the following
sections of the library.
- BF 699-711 Genetic Psychology
- BF 712-724 Developmental Psychology
- BJ Ethics
- QP Physiology
- QR Microbiology
- R 724 Medical Ethics
- RA 773-778 Personal Health & Hygiene
- RB Pathology
If you are not in Denver
Look for similar libraries in your area. Try a libraries
directory or the Librarians' Internet Index.
Associations
Government Information and Regulators
Other Lists of Resources
To search for more of these on the web, try a search limited to sites with an edu ending. As in the search aging site:edu on Google.
Plagiarism
Plagiarism is very easy to avoid but just as easy to do!
"Plagiarism:
What It Is and How To Avoid It" created by the
Indiana University Campus Writing Center provides a clear
explanation of the subject.
Citation styles
Style manuals are tools for giving credit to the original
authors. Use this QUICK
ONLINE GUIDE to citing styles (B. Davis Schwartz Memorial
Library at Long Island University).
Your instructor prefers the AMA citation style wherein
references are given as endnotes.
- AMA - American Medical Association
manual of style : a guide for authors and editors. Baltimore
: Williams & Wilkins, c1998, 9th edition. The print
version of this is not available at Auraria Library. Click
here to see
other locations in the Front Range.
Two other citing styles acceptable to your instructor,
Linda B. White, M.D., are MLA and APA.
- MLA - MLA handbook for writers of
research papers / Joseph Gibaldi. New York : Modern Language
Association of America, 1999. REF LB2369 .G53
1999
- APA - Publication manual of
the American Psychological Association. Washington, DC
: American Psychological Association, 1994. REF
DESK BF 76.7 P82 1994
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