Library:Library Research Skills For Biologists/Module 1/Page 04

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ARCHIVE PAGE: Aug 2015

How Can I Use This?

Secondary Sources are useful for both gaining a broad knowledge of a topic area (e.g review papers), and for understanding how certain discoveries or projects were received by the scholarly community. They give you opinions, analysis, and a discussion of impact which you can use to place primary sources in context.

Secondary Literature

When other writers summarize or review the theories and results of original scientific research, their publications are known as Secondary Literature. These publication types serve to synthesize the findings to date and present the ideas to a wider audience. Examples of secondary literature include:

  • Review articles
  • Edited volumes
  • Books summarizing research in an area
  • Abstracts and Indexes - Tools used to find articles in scholarly journals

Secondary literature is not as current as the primary literature but it is often more descriptive and is useful for finding introductory material.

Insulin: Discussing the Experiment and Finding Papers

Journal Article:

Grodsky (1970) wrote a journal article called Insulin and the pancreas [1] in which he reviewed over 500 other publications about insulin.

Article Index:

Researchers typically use online indexes to find articles on a specific topic. If you searched in Web of Science and looked up the author "Banting, F", you would find citations to the articles he published in the Journal of Laboratory and Clinical Medicine. The "Finding Articles" module explains how to select and use an index.

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References Cited:

  1. Grodsky, G.M. 1970. Insulin and the pancreas. Vitamins & Hormones, 28: 37-101.