As well as the information on this page, you can also get help through:
The Skills Hub has a range of guides to help you with using Discovery and finding information for assignments and research. Visit the Finding Information section of the guide to learn more.
Rachel Whittington is available to help with questions about finding information, evaluating sources, referencing and using EndNote. Contact her at R.Whittington@hw.ac.uk
When searching for a specific item, you can usually search for the title, or a section of the title, using quotation marks or whatever your chosen database uses for phrase searching. For example, to find:
Becherer, D. and Ward, I. (2010) Optimal Weak Static Hedging of Equity and Credit Risk Using Derivatives. Applied Mathematical Finance 17(1): pp1-28.
you would search for ["Optimal Weak Static Hedging of Equity and Credit Risk Using Derivatives"]
But when you are researching a topic, you need to think carefully about the words you use to search with - your 'keywords'.
Keywords are important! The words you use, and how you put them together in your search, will determine how successful your search results are. Think about what you know already and what you need to find out about.
For example, let’s assume you have a general topic around cyber security in the UK - How well do you know this topic?
If this is an entirely new topic to you, the first stage will be general background reading (e.g. dictionaries, encyclopaedias, handbooks, textbooks and websites - not journal articles). Having a better understanding of the topic, will give you a better idea of the sorts of questions you might want your dissertation/essay to answer and the sub-topic/chapters that you will research.
Sometimes you have to use broad concepts/keywords (to get a better understanding of a topic) and narrow concepts/keywords when you want to pinpoint more relevant material.
Remember also, think about:
Actuarial Science Glossaries created by the Institute and Faculty of Actuaries:
You can search for a specific book, or search for any books we have on a topic in Discovery
Dewey classification mean that library materials are shelved in subject groupings.
Not sure where things are in the Library? Discovery records have a 'map it' button which shows you the book's general location on a map of the library floor.
To find journal articles Discovery is a good place to start. This allows you to cross-search lots of different publishers/databases (including Emerald, Cambridge Journals, ScienceDirect, JSTOR, Web of Science, etc.) and allows you to find books, journal articles, news articles, conference papers etc, that match the keywords you enter into the search box.
You can search Discovery by entering search terms/keywords in the search box below. Alternatively, you may wish to look at the full A-Z list of databases.
Let’s assume you have done a search and have found (or have been given on a reading list) a really useful article. How can you use this article to find other good articles? There are various different ways: