Transcript for "How Do I Find Peer-reviewed Articles?"

Do you need to find peer reviewed articles for your class assignment? This video tutorial will show you how.

Peer review is a process where an article submitted to a journal is reviewed and critiqued by other subject matter experts. These experts determine if the article is worthy of publication.

You can use Scholar OneSearch, the library's catalog and discovery system, to find peer reviewed articles. Scholar OneSearch is on the library homepage above the Research box. Type in a few keywords related to your topic, such as climate change. Then click on the red search button.

In the Filter My Results panel, look for the peer reviewed journals filter. You can find it to the left of your search results under the Show Only heading. Clicking on this filter and clicking Apply Filters will limit your results to peer reviewed journals.

You can also find peer reviewed articles in individual library databases. To get started, click the Databases link after the Scholar OneSearch box on the library homepage. From the databases list, click on the dropdown menu under All Database Types then select Articles.

You can choose a database from the list and log in using your Northeastern username and password. To limit to articles in a particular subject area use the All Subjects dropdown menu. In the database look for a button that says peer reviewed, scholarly journals, academic journals, or articles. This option may look different in different databases. With that option checked, your search should only be showing you results that have been published in peer reviewed journals.

If you don't see one of these options in the database you're using view the tutorial on how to know if an article is peer reviewed. Keep in mind that not everything published in a peer reviewed journal is a peer reviewed article. Academic journals also publish editorials, book reviews, commentaries, and other short pieces.

If you are unsure, do one last visual check. The full text of articles will often include labels or cues that identify the text type. This piece is identified as a commentary. To learn more about the other cues to check for view the scholarly versus non scholarly sources tutorial.

Need help? Ask a librarian at library.northeastern.edu/ask

Transcript for "How Do I Know if An Article is Peer-reviewed?"

How do you know if an article you found is peer-reviewed? This video will show you how to check.

Let's say I'm looking at a reference list and find an article that looks interesting.

How can I determine whether the article is peer-reviewed? In this case, we want to investigate an article entitled Stereotyping and Evaluation in Implicit Race Bias: Evidence for Independent Constructs and Unique Effects on Behavior.

The first step is to look for the name of the journal. The journal name is italicized in citations. This article was published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.

You can use Scholar OneSearch the large search box on the library homepage to find out whether this is a peer-reviewed journal. To check if the journal is peer-reviewed type the name of the journal into Scholar OneSearch. Here we'll type the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.

Then we'll click the magnifying button to run a search. Putting quotation marks around the journal title helps retrieve more relevant results. Quotation marks tell Scholar OneSearch to search for the exact title phrase.

If the library subscribes to the journal, it should appear near the top of your results list. Peer -eviewed journals will have a purple icon and peer review displaying below them in the results list. If you don't see the journal title in your Scholar OneSearch results, you can use a tool called UlrichsWeb. UlrichsWeb can help you find out whether a journal is peer-reviewed.

To access UlrichsWeb, go back to the library homepage and click on the Databases link. From the A-Z list, click on the letter U. Locate UlrichsWeb in the list and click on it. Enter the journal title into the search box. Here we'll enter the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. Using quotation marks around the title will help to limit your results.

You may see multiple listings for the print and digital versions of the journal. Look to the left of the journal title to see a referee shirt symbol. This is the symbol for refereed. Refereed means the journal has been peer-reviewed.

We can see the symbol next to the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. So this journal is peer-reviewed. If you don't see the shirt, the journal is not peer-reviewed. If you need help searching for peer reviewed sources, check out the tutorial on how to find peer-reviewed articles.

Need help? Ask a librarian at library.northeastern.edu/ask