Boolean Operators are used to connect and define the relationship between your search terms. When searching electronic databases, you can use Boolean Operators to either broaden or narrow your search results. The three Boolean Operators are AND, OR and NOT.
Boolean operators are simple words (AND, OR and NOT) used as conjunctions to combine or exclude keywords in a search, resulting in more focused search results.
Note:
AND is the default or implied operator in Usearch, Google, Scopus, PubMed, EBSCOhost, and most search interfaces.
"ecotourism sustainable" is the same as "ecotourism AND sustainable"
In Usearch, EBSCOhost, SCOPUS, and PubMed, Boolean operators (AND, OR, NOT) must be entered in upper case.
Phrase searching is using quotations.
For instance:
It finds the exact phrase, and items with words in the order typed. One exception is Scopus. Scopus uses curly brackets or braces for {exact phrase} searching. In Scopus, quotes are used for "loose/approximate phrase" searching.
Truncation or stemming is using an asterisk *. It is also known as a wildcard. Truncation is a symbol that retrieves all the suffixes or endings of a word.
For instance:
Note:
In the Library of Congress, % (percent sign) is a single character wildcard and ? (question mark) is truncation for multiple characters.
Nesting is commonly used when combining more than one Boolean operator (OR, AND). Most search interfaces search left to right. Using parentheses in a search changes the order of operation.
For instance:
Proximity operators allow you to find one word within a certain distance of another.
With (w), Near (n), Next (n), or Pre (p) are common proximity operators.
Note:
Read the database help to see if proximity operators can be used in your searches.
Thanks to Alfred Mowdood for authoring these instructions.
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