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6.3: Revisit the Literature

  • Page ID
    275292
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    You'll use several of the same techniques for finding sources that we covered in Unit 4. However, now that you already have a few sources, have considered their patterns, and possibly adjusted your topic, you're ready for additional techniques.

    Citation Chasing

    One of the easiest ways to find more sources is to use the ones you already found.

    Find older sources

    Find newer sources

    If yes, you can look for sources that cited those works. Here's how to do this in Google Scholar (your library might have a way to do this within databases).

    In Practice

    Activity: Citation chasing \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    Look at the sources you already found and assess whether they might be useful enough to help you find more sources.

    1. If you have very recent sources, look at who they cited.
    2. If you have older sources, look at who cited them.

    Return to the Databases

    In addition to citation chasing, you'll want to do further database searches.

    Find more terms

    • You might already have terms from Unit 4 when you were evaluating citations.
    • You might have discovered new terminology from the sources you read.
    • If you refined your topic, you might also have new areas you want to pursue.

    Try another database

    I started my searches in APA PsycInfo because I wanted to see the psychological literature about affect. However, I quickly realized this was not useful and had also tried ERIC, an educational database, which was more successful. However, my best bet was actually searching in a library-specific database.

    If you're not sure of other databases available to you, email your library or make an appointment.

    In Practice

    Depending on how many more sources you need, this will involve iterative steps and can become unwieldy and overwhelming. Therefore, continue searching systematically.

    Activity: Database searching \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    Start with one pattern you noticed needs more sources. Or, you can start with a facet of your Venn diagram that's lacking enough sources.

    1. Select a relevant database.
    2. Conduct a search
      1. Combine all the terms you've found for 1 facet in a large set, combined with OR. This can include both subject headings and keywords.
      2. Or, if you'd like to see what kinds of citations you retrieve with different terms, you could conduct two (or more) similar searches.
    3. Evaluate citations. Save any relevant citations.
    4. Save your search(es).

    You can choose whether you'd prefer to go through this set of sources, reiterating the steps from Unit 5 on scanning, reading, taking notes, and considering patterns. This round will usually be faster because you already have some context and a sense of some of the patterns.

    Or, you might continue to find additional sources on a second pattern or by combining different facets of your Venn diagram.

    Process & Note-Taking

    Taking notes is particularly necessary at this stage. You'll likely try multiple terms, combinations, and databases. You probably won't finish in one sitting, especially as you'll iteratively read a few more sources, refine your topic, and then do additional searches.

    Maintaining a methodical process by trying one search at a time, saving your citations & searches, and keeping systematic notes will ensure you

    • Feel less overwhelmed
    • Track what you've done
    • Identify clear next steps for other searches to try
    • Save time by not re-doing searches you forgot you tried

    These notes are just for you so take them however is helpful to you. I recommend that you consider recording:

    • What & where you've searched
    • What you've learned & how you've felt
    • Your next concrete, baby step

    An example of notes might be:

    • What/where searched
      • Example: APA PsycInfo, ERIC, ASC (Academic Search Complete), Google Scholar ("student affect" "graduate students")
        • Here, I list a couple databases as acronyms. I don't list what I searched there since I can save my search history.
        • For Google Scholar, list your searches since they can't be saved
    • What learned
      • Example: Found a bit on student affect. More on anxiety, but less on the process overall. Worried sources still aren't relevant.
        • Here I'm just listing quickly a bit about my findings, just for myself
    • Next steps:
      • Example: Search for "research process" and emotions in APA PsycInfo
        • I just add 1 very specific next step. I could instead have written "Read 3 sources", depending on what I want to do next.

    Build Supports

    Even if you already met with a librarian in Unit 4, this can be a good time for another visit, as a fellow detective on your hunt for clues.

    Librarians can suggest additional databases or search terms you might not have considered and help you troubleshoot if you're feeling stuck. Over the years, I've met with many students who wanted to confirm whether they had truly found a gap in the literature or were simply missing sources. Sometimes I could confirm that the area seemed under-researched; other times, I'd suggest a new database or search term, opening a plethora of relevant results.

    Next Steps

    Once you've found more sources, return to the iterative process from Unit 5:

    The cycle often gets faster & easier as you gain context & familiarity with your topic and the literature. Depending on your topic and the need you have to write this literature review, you might need to dive into other types of sources, beyond the recently published peer-reviewed studies you've been finding.


    This page titled 6.3: Revisit the Literature is shared under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Frances Brady.