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Search by Citation box always takes precedence
over the Search by Authors or Keywords box, so an invalid citation in the Authors or Keywords
box will return no videos even if there is a valid citation in the bottom box. All
fields in the Authors or Keywords box are connected with an AND expression.
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signal transduction
into the "Words anywhere in article" box, the search engine will find all articles which include either the term signal or the term transduction, but will list any which use both terms before any which use only one or the other, and will list articles which use the terms more frequently before those which use them less. Articles in which the word appears in the Title/Abstract are listed before articles containing the term(s) only in the text.
signal transduction
will return articles which include either the term signal or the term transduction (or both). A phrase search enclosed in quotation marks:
"signal transduction"
will only return articles where the term transduction immediately follows the term signal; articles containing only signal, only transduction, or even "transduction signal" are not returned.
child*
will return articles containing child, childcare, and children; likewise, a search for
phospha*
will return articles containing phosphatase and phosphate.
Wildcards can also be used to truncate words before non-English characters such as an umlaut (ü) or an accent (é). Since these characters cannot be searched, a word such as the author name Grundström should be searched as Grundstr*. Note that wildcards can only be used after characters; any characters following a wildcard in a single word will be discarded, and may cause an error.
The AND connector limits the search results to articles that contain all of terms that are
connected by AND. For example, a search for
human diseases
will return all articles
that contain the term human or the term diseases (and depending on the
journal, this could cause an error). In practice, this will retrieve articles as diverse
as human evolution and avian diseases. Inserting an AND statement like so:
human AND diseases
ensures that only articles that mention both human and diseases will be returned.
The NOT term can be used to exclude articles containing certain terms. For example, if you
wanted to search for articles about the gene called sos that did not deal with
Drosophila, the search would be constructed as such:
sos NOT drosophila
For more complex searches, these operators may be combined with one another, optionally using parentheses to group terms to avoid ambiguity in a complex query. For example,
("signal transduction" AND (phosphorylation OR kinase)) NOT xenopus
finds only articles which use the phrase "signal transduction" and either the word phosphorylation or the word kinase, but do not mention the word Xenopus.
thrombin
will return all articles containing the term, but a search for
Thrombin
will generally return articles where Thrombin is the first word in a sentence. In general, you should use lower-case in all of your searches unless you have a specific reason to do otherwise.
Punctuation is not searched and is treated as a space. The only exceptions to this are
parentheses "()" and asterisks "*", and the use of a hyphen
"-" in author's names. Therefore, the parentheses and
the wildcard character have special meaning in the search context
and cannot be searched in the text. If a search term includes punctuation (such as a dash
"-" or a plus "+"), enclose the whole word in quotation marks to
ensure that proper spacing is maintained in the search.
transcription
may turn up articles containing similar words such as transcript and transcribed. These additional words may not always be highlighted in the text. If you wish to disable stemming, enclose each individual term in quotation marks. If you do so, and also use Boolean connectors to combine terms, be sure that AND, OR, or NOT are not included in the quotation marks.
"motor cortex"
will highlight instances of the phrase "motor cortex", as well as any uses of the words motor or cortex.
If your search was executed properly but did not return any articles, the message "Your search retrieved zero articles." will be displayed at the top of the screen, along with some suggestions for narrowing your search. In this case, the search can be broadened as described above to redefine the search. Appropriate use of wildcards with search terms, or author names for which you are not sure of the exact spelling, can also help. There is also the possibility that no articles matching your interests are in the journal's collection.
When a true search error occurs, the message "There was a problem with our search system." will appear at the top of the screen. This most commonly means that too many articles were returned. This will happen if a common word (for example, and or the) is used. Single letters not included in a phrase will return similar errors. Finally, note that parentheses and quotation marks come in sets: if only one is used, an error will result. Ensure that you are not using common words or single characters; if the error cannot be resolved, send us feedback describing the problem.
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