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BIO 331 - Medical Mycology: Online Databases for Biology

Guide to accompany Dr. El Mounadi's BIO 331 - Medical Mycology

Online Databases for Biology

Online Databases for Medical Mycology

Full Text (articles attached) resources:

  • Science Direct 
    • Journals, and ebooks from Elsevier Scientific Publishing.
    • Most are in full-text
  • BioOne 
    • 100% full text.

    • Journals from scientific associations and non-commercial publishers.

    • Focus on biological, ecological, and environmental sciences.
    • Especially good for research in entomology, ornithology, and herpetology.

Citation databases (more titles, less full-text):


Other databases to consider:

  • JSTOR 
    • Use Advanced Search
    • Select from 234 Biological Sciences journals, most of which are in full-text.
  • Agricola 
    • U.S. Department of Agriculture's National Agricultural Library.
    • A very broad definition of "Agriculture"
    • Excellent source for U.S. Government-sponsored information 
    • The citations are comprised of journal articles, monographs, theses, etc.
    • Can be searched simultaneously with BIO ABSTRACTS and GREENFILE
  • GreenFILE
    • Ecology and Environmental Science Journals and Magazines
    • Most citations have full-text of the article included.
    • EBSCO search engine
    • Search along with BioAbstracts by using the "Choose Database" link.
    • Can be searched simultaneously with BIO ABSTRACTS and  AGRICOLA

 

 

Is this journal legitimate?

In the last 10 years, scholarly publishing has been plagued by explosive growth of bogus scientific journals, sometimes called "predatory journals." 

Library databases will screen out these fake journals for you, but if you are picking something from the public internet, you need to add an extra step to your research.  You need to make sure the article you are looking at comes from a genuine peer-reviewed journal.  

There is a library database called Cabell's that lists predatory journals:    Cabell's Predatory Reports.  Go to this database and type in the name of the journal you found on the web.  If you find the journal in this database, you should not use the article in your research.  The Journalytics database listed on this page is a listing of legitimate journals.