An explorative search is a broad search, which gives you an overview of what literature and data is available within your topic. It helps you to clarify your mind and later it will serve as your foundation to describe a rationale - the scientific background for the study, and to write your problem formulation.
Start
You scored %%SCORE%% out of %%TOTAL%%.
Your performance has been rated as %%RATING%%
Your answers are highlighted below.
Question 1
Which of the following databases and search engines can show you the most cited articles at the top of your search results?
A
Pubmed
B
Google Scholar
C
Embase
Question 2
If you want to contact an author of a journal article you find interesting, which author should you contact?
A
Always the first author
B
The last author, who is usually the department leader
C
The author indicated by “Address to which correspondence should be addressed”
Question 3
If you receive 5000 results in Pubmed your topic is
A
Too broad
B
Too narrow
C
Suitable
Question 4
If your explorative search reveals only 3 articles which of the following may apply?
A
Your topic is novel and you will need to base it on empirical data rather than on already published literature
B
Your topic is too narrow
C
The databases you have chosen to search in are not relevant for the topic you have chosen
Once you are finished, click the button below. Any items you have not completed will be marked incorrect.
Get Results
There are 4 questions to complete.
You have completed
questions
question
Your score is
Correct
Wrong
Partial-Credit
You have not finished your quiz. If you leave this page, your progress will be lost.