FIND FULL-TEXT USING THE LINK IN THE DATABASES Nova Southeastern University Health Professions Division Library
Jun 29, 2015
FIND FULL-TEXT USING THE
LINK IN THE DATABASES
Nova Southeastern UniversityHealth Professions Division Library
PDF files provide a visual replica, or scanned copy, of the material as it was originally published in print and therefore preserve all formatting, page numeration, and original images, charts, graphs, etc.
Full Text - Refers to the electronic representation of a document that includes the complete text of the original document - usually a book or an article.
What is Full-Text?
HTML files provide the complete text and may include graphs, tables, images from the original. The original formatting and page numeration is often lost in HTML versions.
What is Find It!?
Find It! acts as an intermediary service to create a shortcut link between a citation in a database and the full text of a document.
Find It! Saves you time – you no longer need to write down the citation and then check the Journal Finder, NovaCat or other databases…Find It! does it for you.
If full text is not available online, it provides other options for obtaining full text.
How to use Find It!
Using Find It! is easy. When searching a database, you will see the Find It! button on citations that do not have the full text available in that database.
Journal Finder
Enter the journal name in the Find: box
Use an * to enter partial words, i.e. Biolog* Psy*
Other search options include Publisher, ISSN, or subjects
Searches can be for Contains, Begins With, or Exact Match
More options allow you to browse titles and to search by DOI
Journal Finder The search produced 3 journal titles
containing the words Biological psychiatry
The first one is where our article appears
Notice that the journal is offered in electronic full-text format in the ScienceDirect database from 1995-present
Click on the link for ScienceDirect to navigate to the article
Navigating to the article
The opening page is for the current issue of Biological Psychiatry.
On the left side is a list of Articles in Press, which are the previous issues of this journal.
Our article was published in 2000, volume 48.
Bienvenu, O. J., Samuels, J. F., Riddle, M.A., Hoehn-Saric, R., Liang, K-Y., Cullen, B. A. M., Grandoes, M. A., & Nestadt, G. (2000). The relationship of obsessive-compulsive disorder to possible spectrum disorders: results from a family study. Biological Psychiatry, 48, 287-293.
Navigating to the article
Click on the link for the Volumes/Year of the article.
Bienvenu, O. J., Samuels, J. F., Riddle, M.A., Hoehn-Saric, R., Liang, K-Y., Cullen, B. A. M., Grandoes, M. A., & Nestadt, G. (2000). The relationship of obsessive-compulsive disorder to possible spectrum disorders: results from a family study. Biological Psychiatry, 48, 287-293.
Navigating to the article
From the list select the volume where your article appears.
Bienvenu, O. J., Samuels, J. F., Riddle, M.A., Hoehn-Saric, R., Liang, K-Y., Cullen, B. A. M., Grandoes, M. A., & Nestadt, G. (2000). The relationship of obsessive-compulsive disorder to possible spectrum disorders: results from a family study. Biological Psychiatry, 48, 287-293.
Navigating to the article
Our article is #4 in the results list. Simply click on the PDF link to open the full-text.
Bienvenu, O. J., Samuels, J. F., Riddle, M.A., Hoehn-Saric, R., Liang, K-Y., Cullen, B. A. M., Grandoes, M. A., & Nestadt, G. (2000). The relationship of obsessive-compulsive disorder to possible spectrum disorders: results from a family study. Biological Psychiatry, 48, 287-293.
Contact a librarian if you need further assistance
www.nova.edu/hpdlibrary
Nova Southeastern UniversityHealth Professions Division Library