The library would like to understand how our students are using, or plan to use, AI chatbots in research for their assignments, so we've created this survey to hear from you.
AI chatbots such as ChatGPT, Copilot, Perplexity and others can help students at various stages of the research process, within guidelines set by their instructors and KPU's own policy on Academic Integrity.
This survey will enable the library to better meet the needs of those students using, or planning on using, AI chatbots for their academic work.
Please use the QR code below or this link: https://kpu.libwizard.com/f/AI_library_research_survey
Questions about the survey? Please contact Celia Brinkerhoff or Caja Blomley.
Scenario:
"Your uncle is a 60-year-old man with a history of myocardial infarction (heart attack). He has high blood pressure and has been leading a sedentary lifestyle. He wants to get serious about his health. He wants to start losing weight and engage in physical activity. He buys a new iPhone and learns he can use apps. A friend tells him that apple store has 165000 health related apps, he decides to consult with you since you are taking a health class."
Your job is to evaluate a specific health technology app, using credible sources located on the web and through the KPU library. Refer to your assignment for suggestions and guidelines.
For the library workshop, we will be using the weight loss programme, Weight Watchers. You will be choosing your own health app to evaluate.
Tip: Consider choosing a health app that is fairly well known so that you can locate credible information about it. Health technology that is established will be more likely to be the focus of health research and covered by scientific and medical literature.
Below is a set of criteria, or questions, to consider when trying to determine whether a source is credible, relevant, or appropriate for your assignment.
Click the arrows to expand.
A few tips from Advanced Google will be useful additions to your searching for credible sources.
The following screenshot shows a search that uses exact phrase searching "weight watchers" and is restricted to the U.S. government's National Institutes of Health. You can set up your search using the Advanced Google search interface (linked above) until you are familiar with the shorthand commands. Click on the screenshot to see the actual 3,100 results all housed on NIH site.
Use the library's main search box to locate articles, research documents, books and ebooks, streaming videos, and more.
A sample search strategy for our app Weight Watchers might look like this:
"weight watchers" AND outcomes
Adding additional terms to our search, depending on what we are trying to find out, will reduce the number of results, and make them more focussed or relevant.
For example, satisfaction, marketing, sales, etc could be used instead of outcomes in the above search. Similarly, you might want to include a term to describe the population of users you might be recommending the app to: for instance, seniors, or heart attack patients.
Alternatively, try using a broader term such as "health app" or "health applications", "diet apps" or "weight loss apps".
From the set of initial results, use the filters and limits on the left to narrow your results by date and content type.
The following short video from KPU Library demonstrates how to search Summon using a few keywords and filters or limits to narrow your results.
Scholarly nursing and allied health articles.
The interface for this and all our other EBSCO databases will change mid-2025. Click here to try out the new interface early!
Off campus access restricted to current KPU students and employees.
Current scholarly articles from many areas of science and ebooks published from 2017-2021.
Access from 1995 to present.
Off campus access restricted to current KPU students and employees.
There are many ways to access health information on the Statistics Canada site. Starting with some of these basic tools will provide you with a quick overview of your topic.
Keep in mind that most health data is the responsibility of Statistics Canada. The following link searches Statistics Canada by Province. Use the filters on the left to locate by subject.
The links below are to BC specific statistical sources.
Why Citations are Important from RefME on Vimeo.
APA (American Psychological Association) citation style is an "author-date" style of referencing your sources. it consists of 2 piece: an in-text reference to your source (including author last name and date of publication) as well as a reference list at the end of your paper or assignment.
The library has an introduction to the style on its APA Citation guide Useful tabs to get to know are the "In-text citations" tab and the "How do I cite....." tab where you will find examples for various types of sources.
The APA also has its own excellent Style Site. Browse References and In-text citations for details.
If you have used generative AI to help find sources for your assignment, you will need to go the extra step and verify that they actually exist. You've probably heard about "hallucinations" and fake sources that might appear in the search results of some generative AI tools. In some cases, the journals themselves may be legitimate, but the articles or authors don't exist.
Be suspicious! It is up to you to ensure that the sources you include in your assignment exist and are credible!
If you cite sources that don't exist, you will be in violation of KPU's policy on Academic Integrity.
1. If the article citation includes a DOI, check to make sure it leads to an article on a journal or publisher's platform.
2. Put the entire title of a book or article into the Library's Summon search.
3. Copy the entire title into Google Scholar.
Your instructor will offer guidelines as to the acceptable use of Artificial Intelligence for your course assignments. Refer to Academic Integrity's infographic on ChatGPT and Other AI Tools at KPU. Or review KPU Library's guidelines on our Artificial Intelligence guide.