Start off with several key terms, using quotation marks to group words and phrases together, along with Boolean searching (using AND, OR, or NOT between search terms).
On the left side of the search results, you'll find a menu to filter by document type, date range, relevance or date. Use these to narrow your search further.
Search results appear in order of relevance by default, and usually contain a linked title of the article, the basic citation information, and a brief abstract from the text.
Additional links will appear below the result.
To the right of a search result, links will appear to access the full text through Duquesne's website, or available as PDFs through another institution.
If you want to perform an Advanced search, go to the menu tab > Advanced Search.
The advanced search option may not appear if you are in another window such as the Settings page. If this happens, click on the Google Scholar logo to navigate back to the homepage and then go to the menu tab > Advanced Search.
Navigating to Advanced Search from an existing basic search will copy over your search terms for you! Be sure to adjust your Boolean operators if needed.
After searching for a resource, click the Full Text Finder @ Duquesne link on the far right to access an article through Gumberg Library.
If a Full Text Finder link does not appear, click a link that does appear on the far right. This will usually lead to the resource in HTML or PDF formats on the publisher website. If the resource asks for a payment, do not purchase the article or book.
If LibKey Nomad is installed, it will search for full text and provide a button prompt for PDF download if available. Click the link to the article and then select the option to download PDF or find other access options via Gumberg Library.
If you cannot find electronic full text through Google Scholar, another option is searching DUQSearch with the citation information. If you still cannot find full text, enter an ILL request or contact a librarian for further assistance.
Quickly track and analyze articles that list you as an author. For more information on using Google Scholar profiles, click here.
The citation information in Google Scholar is extracted from the scholarly journal articles within the Scholar database, as well as from the U.S. patents within the Google Patents database. You can choose to eliminate or include the patents from legal journals and opinions from the federal and state courts in the citation results.
To find information on a particular author in Google Scholar, start out by searching in the advanced search box for the author's first initial and last name in the designated field.
The results will show all publications by that author indexed in Google Scholar. If the author has an active and public Google Scholar profile, their full name and a link to their profile will appear at the top of the screen
If a publication has been cited by sources indexed in Google Scholar, it will contain a "Cited By" link below the abstract on the results page.
Clicking on that link will show all journal articles, patents, and court opinions citing that publication that are indexed in Google Scholar. The original publication will appear at the top of the page.