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FYS 100: First Philosophy: Building a Research Strategy

An Effective Research Strategy

There are many ways to build an Effective Research Strategy, but they all consist of a number of steps. One option is outlined below. Consider the topic:

The connection between cognitive bias and decision making

Research Strategy

1. Break your topic into concepts (subjects). These concepts will form the building blocks of your search strategy.

 

Why just the keywords?

  • When you search the database, you are often searching the words in the Title and Abstract, not the full-text article.
  • The database will word-match your keywords against the author's words in the title & abstract and deliver only results that match what you enter.
  • The Title and Abstract are written by the author of the article. 
  • Long phrases or sentences will confuse the database and lead to disappointing or NO results. 
  • Pick out the words (KEYWORDS) that indicate the main points of your topic. 

Tips:

  • Good research topics usually contain 2-4 concepts. 
  • Topics with one concept will usually retrieve way too many results.
  • Topics with too many concepts may limit your results too much.

 

 

Strategy Image

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Research Strategy-2

2. Identify alternative words or phrases (synonyms) for each keyword and make a list. Databases look for the exact words and phrases you type in, so if the author uses a different word (synonym) to describe a concept, you will not see that article in your results.

In addition to synonyms, be creative and think of: 

  • Related Words
  • Spelling Variations (especially American vs British, for example anesthesia or anaesthesia)
  • Acronyms (also spell out the phrase)
  • Brand and generic drug names
  • Plural and Singular variations
  • Narrower Terms
  • Broader Terms

Things to consider:

  • Ask yourself, "What other words could the author use to describe this concept?
  • Be careful with phrases. If you search with a phrase, think of alternative ways to describe the phrase and search with that as well.
  • Not familiar with a topic? Having trouble thinking of synonyms?  Browse Credo Reference for background information and alternative search terms.

Here is the beginning of a list for our research question

The connection between cognitive bias and decision making 

Concept 1 Concept 2 Concept 3
connection cognitive bias

decision making

relationship bias  decision 
correlation heuristics choice