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Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Sciences

Guide to locating OT and Rehabilitation research evidence in books, journal articles, databases, and on the web.

Identifying Core Search Concepts & Selecting Keywords

Identifying Core Search Concepts

While a research question (e.g., PICO question) and inclusion criteria may be very specific, to build a comprehensive search for research evidence, it is a good idea to structure the search more broadly.  A comprehensive search often just includes two or three core concepts (for a PICO question, these concepts are often the population and intervention of interest). 

For example, imagine your PICO question is:

"For adolescents with type II diabetes (P) does the use of telehealth consultations (I) compared to in-person consultations (C) improve blood sugar control (O)?

To build a comprehensive search for evidence that answers this question, you could use diabetes and telehealth as your core search concepts, looking for research that brings both these concepts together.  You would then retrieve a broad set of results that could potentially fit with your research question, and the other elements of the research question (e.g., the comparison and outcome) would then be used as screening criteria to help you identify studies for inclusion.

With 2-3 core concepts in mind begin to identify keywords that describe these concepts.  After doing some initial scoping searches, pay close attention to the articles you find that appear to be most relevant - what language do they use to describe these concepts? In order to perform a comprehensive search, it is important to keep track of these synonyms.

As the search evolves, you will begin to notice that some terms are more fruitful than others; building a concept table is a useful way to track search terms, enabling you to document which terms work well and which terms should be eliminated from the strategy.   

Concept Table for Identifying Search Terms
  Concept 1: diabetes Concept 2: telehealth

Keywords/Synonyms

type II diabetes
type 2 diabetes
diabetes mellitus
telehealth
mobile app
cell phone

Tips for Selecting Keywords:

Avoid abstract or implied concepts

The database will only retrieve a record if that record contain your specified search terms, but for some abstract concepts, there is a wide variety of ways that the concept can be expressed or even implied. By using terms to try to describe those ideas in your searches, you may end up excluding relevant articles simply because their records don't include the exact word that you entered.  Some words may even introduce bias into your search. 

In particular, try to avoid using:

Relationship Words

These are words that words that describe the relationship between two topics (e.g., compare, contrast, correlation, impact, effect, causation, relationship).  Instead, consider just using keywords for the concepts you're trying to relate, and then you can evaluation the relationship that exists.

Judgment Words

These are value-laden words that imply that imply something is better or worse than something else (e.g., best, worst, pro, con, advantages, disadvantages, benefits, harms).  These words can unnecessarily introduce bias into your search; it's better to allow the database to retrieve records that meet your topic criteria overall, and then apply your own judgment as the researcher.   

Consider both synonyms and antonyms

Remember that both synonyms (same meaning) and antonyms (opposite meaning) terms can be useful to include to describe a concept.  As you're collecting synonyms, consider including terms for your concepts of interest that may be used more commonly outside of the US (e.g., physiotherapy/physical therapy; barrister/attorney; flat/apartment).

Also, it may be useful to include antonyms for your topics of interest.  For example, if you were interested in student retention, not only would you want to include synonymous terms like student persistence, or graduation, you'd also want include terms for the opposite phenomenon (e.g., student dropouts, student attrition)

Consider abbreviations and spelling variations

It's a good idea to search for both abbreviations and the full phrases for an important concept.  For example, a researcher interested in cognitive behavioral therapy would also want to use the term CBT

If the abbreviation for your topic is very common, and you find the abbreviation is generating lots of false hits, it may be useful to pair it with other qualifying words (e.g., intellectual property OR IP law).

Additionally, consider if your term of interest might have an alternative spelling or in British or Australian English (e.g., labor vs. labour).  See Oxford International English School's webpage for some common spelling variations to look out for. 

Adapted from: VanLeer, L. (n.d.). Academic Guides: Keyword Searching: Finding Articles on Your Topic: Select Keywords. Retrieved September 30, 2022, from https://academicguides.waldenu.edu/library/keyword/search-strategy

Identifying & Using Subject Headings

Searching for the core concepts as keywords or text words is often a good place to start your search. A text word search will retrieve records where the search term appears anywhere in the database record for that article (eg., the authors’ names, the publication title, or the abstract). 

However, you will begin to notice that database records are tagged with a controlled vocabulary to designate the subjects discussed in the full articles.  These are referred to as index terms or subject headings.  They are considered a controlled vocabulary because they are drawn from standardized thesauri that establish definitions and preferred usages; these terms may differ from the natural language text words you initially choose to describe a concept.

For example, indexing in MEDLINE (PubMed) employs Medical Subject Headings (MeSH).  Upon being added to the database, an article about type II diabetes would be tagged with the MeSH term “Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2”.   

To identify database-specific subject headings to use in  your search, you can look up terms directly in the database's subject thesaurus, or notice what subject headings are used in records for relevant literature.

Using Field Tags for Subject Searching

Most article databases allow you to use field tags to search specifically for records that have been tagged with a controlled subject heading, as opposed to performing a keyword or text word search.

In contrast to a text word search (where the query returns citations if the term appears anywhere in the record), a subject heading search (using a field tag) is much more targeted, only returning results where the search term appears as the subject of that article.  Consider the following example from PubMed:

Example search result showing that searching with a MeSH term yields fewer results. Two columns labeled "Query" and "Results" have two entries below: "Search: 'Glucose Intolerace'[TW]" with 16,100 results and "Search: 'Glucose Intolerance']Mesh]" with 8,633 results.

A comprehensive search is usually achieved by searching for a combination of subject headings and text words, so a strategic searcher would be well-advised to keep track of both.

Concept Table for Identifying Search Keywords & Subjects
Search Terms Concept 1: diabetes Concept 2: telehealth

Keywords

type II diabetes
type 2 diabetes
diabetes mellitus
telehealth
mobile app
cell phone

Subject Headings

(PubMed MeSH Terms)

“Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2” Telemedicine
“Remote Consultation”
Smartphone
“Mobile Applications”
“Text Messaging”

Also see:

Employing Boolean Operators

Boolean operators (also called connectors) allow you to specify how you would like a database search platform to handle the terms of your search.  

AND

Connecting search terms with AND tells the database to return records only if all those terms appear in the record.  The operator AND is typically used to connect conceptually distinct terms (such as the P and the I from a PICO question)

Connecting additional terms with AND creates a narrower search, as there will be a smaller number of records that contain the required terms.

Example database search query using the Boolean operator AND
Search Query: Number of Results Returned:
type 2 diabetes 166,000
type 2 diabetes AND telehealth 556
type II diabetes AND telehealth AND blood glucose 195

OR

Connecting search terms with OR tells the database to return records if any of the given terms appear in the record.  Connecting synonyms and alternate terms with OR expands the search results ("OR retrieves MORE").

Example database search query using the Boolean operator OR
Search Query: Number of Results Returned:
telehealth 6,100
telehealth OR telemedicine 33,000
telehealth OR telemedicine OR mobile application 51,000

NOT*

Connecting search terms with NOT tells the database to exclude any records that contain the specified term.  Adding an excluded term with NOT will create a narrower, more specific search. 

Example database search query using the Boolean operator NOT
Search Query: Number of Results Returned:
telemedicine 36,000
telemedicine NOT video 33,000

*Caution: use the NOT operator sparingly and carefully; you could accidentally exclude records that are actually relevant to your search.  For instance, in the example above, even if you aren't interested in seeing articles that talk about video-based telemedicine interventions, if you restrict that word completely, you will miss articles just because they contain the word 'video' somewhere in the abstract.    


Complex Searching

A complex search can be built by using the AND and OR operators together.  Separate concepts can be connected with AND, while synonyms for those concepts can be connected with OR.  It is important to note that synonymous terms connected with OR should be nested within parentheses, so that the database understands to keep those terms together as a set.  

Example complex database search query using multiple Boolean operators
Search Query: Number of Results Returned:
type 2 diabetes 166,000
type 2 diabetes AND telehealth 556
(type 2 diabetes OR T2D) AND (telehealth OR telemedicine OR mobile application) 700

Punctuation

Wildcard / Truncation

Using specific punctuation as wildcard or truncation characters allows you to build a more flexible search by accounting for unknown characters, multiple spellings or various endings.

Many databases use an asterisk * as the wildcard punctuation.  For instance, if you're interested in allergies, a search for that exact word will only return records with the word allergies.  But searching for allerg* will be much broader, capturing records that contain the words allergy OR allergies OR allergen OR allergic etc.

Example database search query showing the effect of searching with truncation
Search Query: Number of Results Returned:
allergies 21,000
allerg* 33,000

Different database platforms allow for different truncation and wildcard punctuation.  See these resources for the specifics related to common platforms:

Phrase Searching

Using specific punctuation or commands to look for exact phrases allows you to build a more specific search.

Many databases use quotation marks as the phrase searching punctuation.  For instance, if you were interested in finding records that talk about the glycemic index, you could locate records with those specific words, in that exact order (rather than the words separately).

Example database search query showing the effect of searching with quotation marks
Search Query: Number of Results Returned:
glycemic index 16,000
"glycemic index" 6,000

Different database platforms may allow for different phrase searching functions.  See these resources for the specifics related to common platforms:

Field Tags

Most databases allow you to include field codes, (also known as field tags, or search tags) with your search terms to specify in which field in the record you would like the database to look for that term. 

Field tags in PubMed vs. Ovid vs. EBSCO.

Different database platforms have different codes and structures for field tags, but some of the commonly available field tags are title, abstract, author and subject heading. 

  • EBSCO Databases (CINAHL and Education Source) - two letter codes, capitalized before the search term.  For example: TI environmental racism
  • PubMed - codes in square brackets, after the search term.  For example, environmental racism[TI]
  • Ovid (EMBASE, PscyINFO, MEDLINE) - codes between two periods, after the search term.  For example, environmental racism.ti.

Some databases also have codes that allow you to search in multiple fields at once.  For instance, PubMed's TW (Text Word) tag allows PubMed to search for the given term in fields like the title, abstract, author supplied keywords, and subject headings.

For more specific information about available field tags by database, see:

Unqualified Searches / No Field Tag

If you don't specify a field, you are performing an "unqualified search", and the database will default to searching multiple fields. Different databases have different default search fields, but title, abstract and subject heading fields are commonly included.  For specific information about what fields are included in unqualified searches by database, see: