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This guide is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA). It has been adapted in part from an original at Indiana University Indianapolis.
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Welcome! This guide will help you get started understanding the research process, and should be your go-to guide for public health research throughout your time here at Miami.
This guide is meant to be self-directed, but don't hesitate to reach out to one of you subject librarians, Ginny Boehme or Megan Jaskowiak, at any point if and when you have questions.
The research process can be complex, but can be loosely broken down into a series of steps. These steps in the process are iterative, meaning they may be repeated, often at least a few times, throughout the course of your research.
This guide is organized to show the research process as a linear series of steps for ease of reading, but keep in mind that you may have to revisit some steps before you finish your research or assignment.
The first step is to identify your research question. This includes learning how to identify and combine good keywords.
The next step is to find sources. This includes understanding different source types and how they fit (or don't!) your research need, as well as searching for and finding full-text.
The third step is to read and evaluate your sources for their usefulness in the context of your research. This includes evaluating a source's credibility.
The last step is to organize your sources so you can write your paper and accurately cite the information you need.
If you want to jump straight into searching for literature, the subject databases below provide the broadest coverage for public health research here at Miami.
NOTE: If prompted, please enter your MU credentials. Do not select “Institutional Sign In.” Clearing web browser cookies and cache may also fix access issues.
Use Web of Science to perform a cited reference search, where you can look up an article and see how many times it has been cited. The Web of Science Core Collection includes the following databases: Science Citation Index (1900-present), Social Sciences Citation Index (1900-present), Arts & Humanities Citation Index (1975-present), Conference Proceedings Citation Index (1990-present), Book Citation Index (2005-present), Emerging Sources Citation Index (2005-present), Current Chemical Reactions (1985-present), Index Chemicus (1993-present). Users may encounter content in this database the library has not purchased.