Showing posts with label subject headings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label subject headings. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

ISTA search part 2

Here we are trying to focus in on a subset of the 287 results that our first search returned. I've added "libraries" to our search because I noticed that this is the relevant term used in most of the subject headings:

This cuts the results about in half, to 153. The fifth result down is the following:

This looks like a great result: it's from an academic journal, it's from a library journal, it is current (fall 2013, less than a year old), and it has promising subject headings. I investigated it further and was not disappointed, but we'll discuss this in the results post.

Monday, February 24, 2014

WorldCat search

For this week's post I am searching WorldCat for web design information. WorldCat is not great for getting information immediately because it is a catalog of library catalogs and thus returns items that the searcher does not have access to. However, for the same reason it is great for getting information on what the research community is interested in or answering the question: "How much information is there on...?"

Accordingly, my objective in this search is to find out whether there exists a lot of information on 'writing for the web.' My textbook included a short section on what writing style is appropriate to effectively convey information on a website, but I want to know more. Specifically, if it turns out that a lot has been written on this topic it will tell me that writing for the web is probably a lot different from other forms of writing and that I should learn more about it so that my web page will be informative and easy to understand.

As the screenshot below shows, I started with a fairly simple keyword search of writing AND (web OR internet). I also specified materials from the last 10 years since this topic is likely to change rapidly.

My initial results were too broad. For instance, they included many style manuals, whose records, reasonably, include "writing" and "internet" (as in "how to cite an internet resource"). However, among the first couple of pages of results I did find some relevant hits so I took a look at those to see if I could use a pearl-growing strategy to figure out some more specific search terms. Below are the WorldCat subject headings for three promising hits:

"Writing for the Internet: A Guide to Real Communication in Virtual Space":
 

"Don't Make Me Think! A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability":



"Web Copy that Sells: The Revolutionary Formula for Creating Killer Copy Every Time":


Although these results do have some subject headings in common, they are not specific to web writing. Instead, the common descriptors are broad ones like "Web sites -- Design." However, "Online authorship," from the first result, looks a bit promising. So I tried a subject search for that:


We've got about 200 results, which is not a lot for a giant PAC like WorldCat. However, the first search established that there are a significant number of other potentially-relevant resources not under that subject heading and the fraction of results from the subject search that are relevant is high, as the subset shown in the screenshot below demonstrates: