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The library's best article databases for biology

Top biology databases

Scientific articles published in scholarly journals are highly focussed and written by researchers for other researchers and experts in the field. They either report on primary research they have done themselves, or provide a review and evaluation of the body of work done in a given area (systematic review or meta-analysis).

Below are the research databases we recommend for starting your scientific article search.

Remember: It's good research strategy to do your searches in MORE THAN ONE database.

To browse the more than 200 databases the library subscribes to, please visit our Research database page.

Why should I use a library database?

A library database provides access to the contents of thousands of scholarly journals, sometimes covering a particular discipline or sometimes multi-disciplinary in scope, meaning they may cover many subject areas.

Better than a Google search, databases come with tools that help you refine your search to get more relevant results, as well as links to related articles. In most cases, you can be confident that the articles you find will be credible sources to incorporate into your writing.

Key features of most databases:

  • ability to filter results by date
  • ability to filter results by content or publication type, ie, journal article, book, reference
  • ability to narrow results by subject or discipline
  • links to related articles
  • links to articles that "cite" the one in your result list

Here is an introduction to one of the library's most popular databases, Academic Search Complete.

The following databases have (mostly) free content.

Add Google Scholar to your set of research tools

Google Scholar is a search engine that covers much of the scholarly, peer reviewed literature from academic publishers, plus conferences, theses and dissertations, abstracts and more. Some of the content is available full text, and some will be citation-only. 

You can configure your settings to include links to articles available from Kwantlen Polytechnic Library subscription journals to avoid hitting publishers' paywalls. See the screenshot below.

    Screenshot of  enabling library links in Google Scholar.

I don't understand the whole peer reviewed / scholarly articles thing

The importance of peer review

This kind of research article is among the most reliable sources of information you can find. And the most rigorous among these are systematic reviews and meta-analyses which comprehensively review and summarize all past articles published on a particular area of research.

Peer-reviewed articles are also how researchers communicate their findings, and verify, disprove, or build upon the research of others.

This video will give you a quick introduction to the peer-reviewed process.

How do I know if it's scholarly?

In a database you can often filter results to "peer reviewed" or "scholarly", but maybe the search tool you are using doesn't have that option; or maybe Google Scholar is telling you it is scholarly, but you aren't sure...

 

See this FAQ on the features of a scholarly, peer reviewed article.

The following KPU Library video explains the purpose and features of a scholarly journal article.

How do I know if the library has this particular article?

The quickest way to see if the library has access to an article is to copy and paste the full title into Summon search.

1. Put the title in quotations marks so that it will be searched as a complete phrase, rather than all of the words separately. Run the search.

2. Next, select Scholarly and Peer-Review articles from the content filter on the left hand side of the results. This is to ensure you are just getting the article itself, and not something about the article. 

3. The article you are looking for should be at the top of the results list because Summon will put the most relevant articles at the top. 

4. Double check using the authors' names: are the authors of your article the same as the ones listed?

Screenshot showing how to use Summon search to find a particular journal article.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

Journal title search

Use the search box below to find any specific journal, magazine or newspaper the Library carries, either online or in print.

 

 

This video will show you how to use the journal title search. 


Get your article through interlibrary loan

Need a journal that isn't in our collection? If you are looking for a particular article in that journal, you can place an interlibrary loan. The Library can usually email it to you within a few days.

How do I find articles that cite my article?

Finding articles that cite each other is sometimes called "citation chaining" and is a good strategy for finding out what researchers are saying about a topic. Once you have found an article that is relevant to your research, there are several tools that will help you find additional ones. 

1.  Google Scholar 

Search Google Scholar for your article. Below the article, you will see a link to Cited by and the number of times the article has been cited by others. In other words, this feature pulls together all of the articles that make reference to your article, giving you an idea of how other researchers have used this publication. Clicking the link will take you to all of those sources.

The number of times an article has been cited by others MAY be an indication of its impact on a topic, but realize that for very recent articles, there may not be many publications that have cited it yet. Make note of when your article was published.

Next to Cited by is a link to Related articles. These are articles that Google Scholar is suggesting may be of interest to your, based on its internal algorithms.

Screenshot of Google Scholar result with Cited by and Related articles links.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Be sure to set your library links to Kwantlen Polytechnic University Library in Google Scholar settings so that you'll have full text access to articles within the library's collection. See this KPU Library FAQ for how to do this.

2.  Summon

In Summon, look for a similar feature below the items in your search results. Cited by brings you articles within Summon that cite your article. Cites brings you the articles referenced in your article that are indexed by Summon. The Related articles feature which will provide you additional articles related to your first one.

3. Library's databases

Most of the library's article databases have similar features. Terminology varies, but look for Times citedCited byRecommended articles and so on for additional ways to locate relevant articles.