The document discusses finding and managing engineering information. It provides guidance on systematically searching for information using subject-specific databases and reference management software to cope with information overload. The document also discusses using encyclopedias, standards, and other reference works for orientation and exploring subject gateways and databases to find full texts of articles and books. It emphasizes the importance of orientation before searching, using multiple information sources, and considering how information will be further processed when researching.
1. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Finding and managing
engineering information
Photos: R. Jupitz
2. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Information challenges for
academic research
• How to be more sure not to miss something
essential?
– Systematically searching for information
– Using subject-specific databases
• How to get full texts?
– Availability in TUHH intranet via search engines
– The library catalog as search engine
• How to cope with information overload?
– Using reference managent software like Citavi
Curiosity!
Doubt!
Graphics: D. Bieler
3. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
• Ullmann's encyclopedia of industrial chemistry
(6. ed., 2002, 40 vols.)
Online in TUHH intranet (2016 ed.)!
• Comprehensive renewable energy
(2013, 8 vols) Online in TUHH intranet!
• Handbook of loss prevention engineering
(2013) Online in TUHH intranet!
• Encyclopedia of tribology (2013)
Online in TUHH intranet!
• Encyclopedia of complexity and systems science
(2009) Online in TUHH intranet!
• Encyclopedia of optimization
(2009) Online in TUHH intranet!
• Wiley encyclopedia of computer science and
engineering (2009)
• Encyclopedia of nanoscience and society
(2010, 2 vols.)
Using encyclopedias and
reference works for orientation!
4. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Subject gateways
U.S. National Center for Biotechnology Information
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
http://www.econbiz.de
A printed source: Using the engineering literature /
Bonnie A. Osif. 2. ed. 2012.
Shelf number for reference copy: TEA-804
https://www.tib.eu/en/
5. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Orientation: Subject information
Process engineering @TUBHH
http://www.tub.tuhh.de/en/subject-information/process-and-chemical-engineering/
6. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Informing – Points to survive
1. Orientation before searching.
2. Don‘t trust only one information source.
How to be more sure not to miss
something essential?
7. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Beyond Google!
FindING @ TUHH-Bibliothek
First orientation
Catalog
Actual
research information
Specials
Reference databases for journal articles:
TEMA, Web of Science
Civil engineering: RSWB, TEMA
Electrical engeineering: Inspec, TEMA, (IEEE)
Mechanical engineering: TEMA, Web of Science
Process engineering: Web of Science, TEMA
Business sciences: TEMA, Business Source
Premier, WISO
Library website: http://www.tub.tu-harburg.de/en/
Subject groups in reading room
Encyclopedias and other reference works
Media - digital (TUHH intranet!) or printed
(reading rooms, closed stacks)
https://katalog.tub.tu-harburg.de/?mylang=en
German DIN standards online!
Patents: Esp@cenet, DEPATISnet
Interlibrary loan and document delivery
8. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Dimensions of
finding
How?
Adopted from: Sheila Corrall, John Dove: Web scale discovery and information literacy: competing visions or mutual support?
LILAC 2012, Glasgow. http://de.slideshare.net/infolit_group/corrall-dove)
Approved
scholarly content
What?
Open web content
Single search box
Advanced search
options
Google
Scholar
Where? Local
availability!
Specialized databases with
costs:
Web of Science, Inspec, wti
9. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
The TUHH Library
Closed Stacks
Readings rooms
• Reference works and
Encyclopedias
• Journals
• Subject groups
• Textbook collection
Digital Library
• Online-Books
• E-Journals
• Databases
Picture: D. Bieler
The catalog – the heart
of the library!
Access to complete
holdings!
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TUBfind
The library catalog as search engine
11. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
TUBfind – simply more!
• Search engine to find TUHH library holdings and more
• Including also journal articles
• Also for searching within library website and library weblog
• In addition finding resources of the GBV Common Library
Network – to order via interlibrary loan
• Search philosophy: Best hits, relevance ranking
• Sorting according descending date possible
• Filtering according format, language, author
14. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Looking for books
http://www.ubka.uni-karlsruhe.de/kvk.html
GVK - GBV Union Catalogue
http://gso.gbv.de/DB=2.1/LNG=EN/
http://www.worldcat.org/
Local library catalog,
e.g. from the TUHH library
https://katalog.tub.tuhh.de/?mylang=en
Regional Catalogue of Hamburg
http://gso.gbv.de/DB=2.91/LNG=EN/
http://books.google.com
http://beluga.hamburg
15. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Finding journal articles via
subject-specific databases
Web of Science with Science Citation Index
- interdisciplinary! Who cited a specific document?
How much is a document cited?
TEMA (Technology and Management),
wti Frankfurt, formerly Fachinformationszentrum (FIZ) Technik
(Access to these reference databases only within TUHH intranet)
PubMed
16. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Full texts of
IEEE, IEE and IET journals
IEEE, IEE and IET conference proceedings
IEEE standards (a lot of ANSI standards are included!)
VDE Publisher Conference Proceedings
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org (Available within TUHH intranet)
IEEE/IEE Electronic Library
17. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Differences
Seach engines Subject databases
• Interdisciplinary sources
• Widely intuitively to use
• Full text often searchable
• Rarely intellectual indexing
• Abbrevating of search terms
automatically („stemming“)
• Search philosophy: Best hits,
relevance ranking
• Good for subject-specific searching
• Sophisticated stragegies for
searching possible
• Full text not included in search index
• Partially intellectual indexing with
descriptors or integrated thesaurus
• Abbreviating search terms with
wildcard symbol (often *)
• Search philosophy: Exact hits,
Boolean combination of search terms
Use diverse databases and search engines!
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Database of databases:
Subject overview
www.bibliothek.uni-regensburg.de/dbinfo/
http://tinyurl.com/DBIS-TUHH (German interface only)
19. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Articles’ databases:
Diversity and outcome
Database GVK-Plus (GBV
Common
Library
Network )
PubMed, TEMA
(wti), Web of
Science
Publishers‘
portals: Wiley,
SpringerLink,
ScienceDirect
Google
Scholar, BASE
(Bielefeld
Acad. Search
Engine)
Content articles, books,
and more
Articles,
(conference
papers)
articles, books,
book chapters
articles, books,
files, and more
Searchable
content
bibliographical
description
bibliographical
description,
abstracts
bibliographical
description,
abstracts, full
text
full text
Content
from
printed and
electronic
holdings of
libraries
diverse
publishers
only publisher,
here e.g.
Springer
who knows?
8-)
Access to
full text
directly, through
library in print
or ordering via
interlibary loan
through other
databases, link
resolver or
interlibrary loan
directly, in case
access is part of
subscription
directly, access
maybe
restricted
20. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
About 60 % of the information in patents is not
published elsewhere.
DEPATISnet - the German patent information
system at http://depatisnet.dpma.de
esp@cenet – European Patent Office
http://worldwide.espacenet.com/
US patents via the US Patent and Trademark
Office http://patft.uspto.gov/
https://www.tub.tuhh.de/en/find/patents/
Patents for talents!
21. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Searching for
substance properties’ data
In reference works
(CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, Perry's Chemical
Engineers' Handbook, Aldrich Handbook)
In extensive substance property collections
(„Handbooks“)
(Landolt-Börnstein Numerical data and functional relationships in
science and technology, Gmelin Handbook of Inorganic and
Organometallic Chemistry, Beilstein Handbook of Organic
Chemistry)
Via the net
(e.g. NIST Chemistry WebBook at
http://webbook.nist.gov/chemistry/ or the Physical Properties
Sources Index (PPSI) at http://www.eqi.ethz.ch/en/
- also: Reaxys, SciFinder, both not @TUHamburg)
More:
https://www.tub.tuhh.de/en/find/substance-property-data/
22. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Specials: Searching for
substance properties’ data
Data on harzardous substances with safety instructions
and data sheets containing operational guidelines and
hints to laws (e.g. EU) as well as to compulsory and
advisory critical levels in the area of hazardous materials!
http://tinyurl.com/merkblaetter
23. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Informing – Points to survive
1. Orientation before searching.
2. Don‘t trust only one information source.
3. In case you are asked for your login or for your credit card,
remember the library …
How to get full text?
24. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
How to get the full text
of this article?
Sparrow, B.; Liu, J.; Wegner, D. M. (2011): Google Effects
on Memory: Cognitive Consequences of Having
Information at Our Fingertip. Science 333, 6043, 776-
778 2011.
Access: Online in Internet as author
copy
How to get the full text in case the
author would not have put the article
online?
25. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
How to get the full text
of this article?
R. Ladenstein, G. Antranikian: Proteins from
hyperthermophiles: Stability and enzymatic catalysis
close to the boiling point of water. Biotechnology of
Extremophiles. 1998, pp. 37 - 85.
Access: Printed in a book located in
the TUHH reading rooms
How found?
26. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
How to get the full text
of this article?
Early Modern Information Overload, Daniel Rosenberg,
Journal of the History of Ideas 64 (2003) 1, pp. 1-9
10.1353/jhi.2003.0017
Access: Full text from TUHH only
available via interlibrary loan!
How to do interlibrary loan?
What does the character string at the
end of the citation mean?
27. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
How to get the full text
of this article?
Access not possible via publisher‘s
website within TUHH intranet.
Catalog links to fulltext via GetInfo at
TIB Hannover!
Merajver, S. D.; Yorke, E. D.; Rocco, A. G. de. Random-
walk model of the phase transition of hydrocarbon chains
on a lattice. Physical Review A (General Physics) 1981, 23
(2), 897–907
28. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
„On the shoulders of“
Google Scholar
Ca. 1410
Quelle: http://lccn.loc.gov/50041709
29. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Google Scholar http://scholar.google.com
Finding full texts
36. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Interlibrary loan via
library union network
Interlibrary loan for material not
owned by the TUHH library!
Use the databases of the
GBV Common Library Network
to locate material!
Fee 1,50 € for one article (copy) or
book.
38. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Function of Link
Resolvers
Cited source
Link Resolver
Source of full text
Knowledge base
with local
holdings data
Catalog data,
maintenance through
library
Meta data
(in OpenURL)
URL of source,
e.g. DOI
(in OpenURL)
Search in catalog,
interlibrary loan
database
Meta data
(in OpenURL)
39. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Informing – Points to survive
1. Orientation before searching.
2. Don‘t trust only one information source.
3. In case you are asked for your login or for your credit card,
remember the library …
4. When searching: „Bulls*** in, bulls*** out.“
Think about search terms you use and their
variations and synonyms.
Poorly chosen search terms bring poor search
results. Too general key words lead to too many
hits from which often only a fraction is useful;
when using too specific key words, important
information might not be found.
40. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Play! With search terms!
Make a search term diagram!
Topic: Microbial degradation of aromatic compounds in soil
Component 1 Component 2 Component 3
Microbi* degrad* aromat* soil*
Biodegrad* Polyaromat* Clay*
Bioremed* Benzene compost*
Microbi* decompos* PAH sediment*
Mikrobiol* abbau* Naphthalin Boden*
Böden
Component 1 AND Component 2 AND Component 3
where e.g.
Component 1 = (“microbi* degrad*”) OR biodegrad* OR bioremed* OR...
41. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Play! With search terms!
Make a search term diagram:
Topic: Recycling of plastics by biotechnological methods
Component 1 Component 2 Component 3
Recycl* Plasti* biotech*
reuse polymer* Biodegrad*
Wiederverw* Kunststoff* Microbi*
Verwert* PVC
Component 1 AND Component 2 AND Component 3
where e.g.
Component 2 = (plasti* OR polymer* OR kunststoff* OR...
42. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Playing with search terms
in Web of Science
www.bibliothek.uni-regensburg.de/dbinfo/
43. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Play! With databases!
Explore database features:
• Boolean logic
• Wildcard symbols: * ? $
• “Neighborhood operators”:
Context and phrases
• Search fields:
Basic index, author field,
descriptor or thesaurus fields
44. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Informing – Points to survive
1. Orientation before searching.
2. Don‘t trust only one information source.
3. In case you are asked for your login or for your credit card,
remember the library …
4. When searching: „Bulls*** in, bulls*** out.“
5. When finding information - think already of its further
processing, respectively later publication of your
research results.
How to cope with
information overload?
45. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Reference management
is no art!
Matej Krén, Idiom, Town Library Prague (1998), Photo
2009
Today not searching or finding is the main problem,
but coping with information overload!
46. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Software for reference
management
http://www.tub.tuhh.de/en/publishing/reference-management/
47. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Possible functionalities
in Citavi
Step-by-Step Overview
http://ftp.citavi.com/service/en/docs/Ci
tavi_5_Slideshows.pdf
Numbers can be used for short
links to step-by-step guides in
the manual, e.g.
www.citavi.com/shows/10
48. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Reference management
on the web with Zotero
49. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Bibliographical formats
to import
TY - JOUR
SN - 0926-9630
AU - Jauhiainen, A.
AU - Pulkkinen, R.
T1 - Problem-based learning
JF - Studies in health
SP - 572
EP - 576
VL - 146
PY - 2009
KW - Education
KW - Nursing
ER -
RIS
%0 Journal Article
%@ 0926-9630
%A Jauhiainen, A.
%A Pulkkinen, R.
%T Problem-based learning
%J Studies in health
%P 572-576
%V 146
%D 2009
%K Education
%K Nursing
EndNote Tagged
@article{Jauhiainen_Pulkkinen:
2009,
author = {Jauhiainen, A. and
Pulkkinen, R.},
year = {2009},
title = {Problem-based
learning and e-learning
methods in clinical practice},
keywords = {Education;
Nursing},
pages = {572--576},
volume = {146},
issn = {0926-9630},
journal = {Studies in health}
}
BibTeX
PMID- 19592907
PT - Journal Article
IS - 0926-9630 (Print)
AU - Jauhiainen A
AU - Pulkkinen R
TI - Problem-based learning
JT - Studies in health
PG - 572-6
VI - 146
DP - 2009
MH - Education
MH - Nursing
No Standard
50. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Types of Citation Styles
50
References as
in-text
citations
Author / Date
(Doe, Smith 2009:
14)
Reference
number
[34]
Citation Key
[DoS09:14]
References as
footnotes
Author / Date
Doe, Smith 2009: 14
Full citation
Jane Doe, Mia
Smith: E-Learning.
London 2009, p. 14
Full citation in footnotes sometimes
called „Oxford System“.
Known style = Chicago-Manual of Style
Author-Year-System also called
„Harvard System“.
Known style = APA-Style.
51. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Combining Citavi or Zotero
with Word or Writer
52. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
How to reduce uncertainty to miss
important information?
• Using different databases.
• Using subject-specific databases.
• Reflecting on appropriate search terms.
• Knowing how to logically combine search terms
within a specific database interface.
• Keeping treck of results through effective
reference management.
• …
A first summary
53. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Basic rules for citing
1) Used sources have to be quoted.
2) Position of references has to be without any doubt.
3) Cited sources have to be traceable because of bibliographical
description.
4) Consult the original document of your sources!
Don‘t use a citation from a paper without looking at the
original document of the citation.
Avoid secondary citations!
According:
Theuerkauf, Judith: Schreiben im Ingenieurstudium : Effektiv und effizient zur Bachelor-, Master- und
Doktorarbeit. Paderborn : Schöningh, 2012, pp. 86-99.
Biedermann, Wieland et al: Forschungsmethodik in den Ingenieurwissenschaften : Skript vom Lehrstuhl für
Produktentwicklung, Prof. Dr.-Ing. Udo Lindemann, Technische Universität München (TUM), 2012, p. 63.
54. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Avoid secondary
citations! An example
A conference paper cited a lot
Friedel, L. (1979). Improved Friction Pressure Drop Correlations for
Horizontal and Vertical Two-Phase Pipe Flow, European Two-Phase
Flow Group Meeting, Ispra, Italy, June, Paper E2.
55. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Also actually cited a lot!
Friedel, L. (1979). Improved Friction Pressure Drop Correlations for
Horizontal and Vertical Two-Phase Pipe Flow. …
56. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Locating paper via
interlibrary loan!
Searching the catalog of the GBV Common Library Network
(https://www.gbv.de/?set_language=en):
Friedel, L. (1979). Improved Friction Pressure Drop Correlations for
Horizontal and Vertical Two-Phase Pipe Flow, European Two-Phase
Flow Group Meeting, Ispra, Italy, June, Paper E2.
57. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Accessible at TIB/UB
Hannover!
Searching the catalog of the GBV Common Library Network:
Friedel, L. (1979). Improved Friction Pressure Drop Correlations for
Horizontal and Vertical Two-Phase Pipe Flow, European Two-Phase
Flow Group Meeting, Ispra, Italy, June, Paper E2.
58. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Getting the paper via
interlibrary loan!
Accessible is only the abstract!
Friedel, L. (1979). Improved
Friction Pressure Drop
Correlations for Horizontal and
Vertical Two-Phase Pipe Flow,
European Two-Phase Flow Group
Meeting, Ispra, Italy, June, Paper
E2.
And now?
59. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Searching the paper in an
engineering database!
Database: TEMA Technology and Management from wti-Frankfurt
Friedel, L. (1979). Improved Friction Pressure Drop Correlations for
Horizontal and Vertical Two-Phase Pipe Flow, European Two-Phase
Flow Group Meeting, Ispra, Italy, June, Paper E2.
60. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Complete paper
appeared in a journal!
Result in TEMA:
Friedel, L. (1979).
Improved Friction
Pressure Drop
Correlations for
Horizontal and Vertical
Two-Phase Pipe Flow,
European Two-Phase
Flow Group Meeting,
Ispra, Italy, June, Paper
E2.
61. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Journal in print available
at TUHH library!
Friedel, L. (1979).
Improved Friction
Pressure Drop
Correlations for
Horizontal and Vertical
Two-Phase Pipe Flow,
European Two-Phase
Flow Group Meeting,
Ispra, Italy, June, Paper
E2.
62. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Searching for paper in
database Web of Science!
Friedel, L. (1979). Improved Friction Pressure Drop Correlations for
Horizontal and Vertical Two-Phase Pipe Flow, European Two-Phase
Flow Group Meeting, Ispra, Italy, June, Paper E2.
63. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Versions of citing
Friedel‘s paper
Searching the database
„Web of Science“!
The correct citation:
Friedel, L. (1979). Improved
Friction Pressure Drop
Correlations for Horizontal
and Vertical Two-Phase Pipe
Flow.
In: 3 R-International, 18, 7,
485-491.
„Mixtures“ 8-)
64. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Informing – Points to survive
1. Orientation before searching.
2. Don‘t trust only one information source.
3. In case you are asked for your login or for your credit card,
remember the library …
4. When searching: „Bulls*** in, bulls*** out.“
5. When finding information - think already of its further
processing respectively later publication of your
research results.
6. Keeping current …
7. Reflect on information and on your own information behavior
https://www.tub.tuhh.de/en/find/subject-information/informing-points-to-survive/
66. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Thinking about
information!
How to cite? What can I copy?
Thinking about intellectual property!
What is not included in Google?
Danger of monopoly of information
access?
Costs of scholarly journals?
67. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Nature Special on the
future of publishing
http://www.nature.com/news/specials/scipublishing/
Open Access
Data curation
Quality of Open Access
publishers
Alternatives to Peer Review:
“Altmetrics”
Impact-Factor and Hirsch-
Index
Creative Commens-Licences
68. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Again a tip:
Thinking anew about science!
New Open Access publication: http://www.openingscience.org/get-the-book/
69. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
At the end something general
Some general hints and key competences when managing
information
‣ Be prepared for constant change.
‣ Know your skills and limits!
‣ Tolerate ambiguity and differences.
‣ Don‘t give up too early.
‣ Be aware that every fact is the result of an act, that information
has been created by somebody with a certain purpose.
According: T. Hapke: Informationskompetenz in einer neuen Informationskultur. In:
Handbuch Informationskompetenz, S. 36-48. Ed. W. Sühl-Strohmenger. Berlin: De Gruyter
Saur, 2012.
70. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Want to know a
little bit more?!
Appendix I. The world of biotechnology
information: seven points for reflecting on
your information behavior (by T. Hapke)
In: Buchholz, K., Kasche, V., Bornscheuer, U.T.:
Biocatalysts and Enzyme Technology. 2. ed.
Wiley-VCH, 2012, S. 553-564.
Preprint available at: http://www.chemie.uni-
greifswald.de/~biotech/assets/downloads/Infor
mation_BuchholzKascheBornscheuer.pdf
71. April 2016 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Kontakt
Thomas Hapke
• Web: http://www.tuhh.de/b/hapke/
• Blog: http://blog.hapke.de
• Slidespace: http://www.slideshare.net/thapke
• Tweets: http://twitter.com/thapke
Informing – Points to survive at
http://www.tub.tu-harburg.de/en/subject-information/informing-points-to-
survive/