Start with a helpful article or book. Use it to find related resources.
Many databases feature a References tab/page so you can see who they cited.
Library OneSearch has down arrows to connect you to the articles' References
Library OneSearch uses an up arrow to show sources citing this
Google Scholar also does this
These can lead you to other related sources
Look at their personal website or professional CV to see other things they have written
Use these links to access resources and request them from other libraries.
Try using quotation marks when researching phrasal concepts (e.g., "European Union") or conducting known-item searches for titles:
However, "Donut Day" in quotation marks will search for the documentary with the same name.
When pairing two or more keywords with another keyword, it is helpful to "nest" the former terms within a larger Boolean search.
For example, (memory OR nostalgia) AND Japan will return results for Japan and any one (or both) of the parenthetical terms.
(Many catalogs or databases will have an "advanced search" option, which provides multiple search bars to facilitate nested searching.)
Most catalogs and databases enable variations of keywords by using truncation (*) or wildcard (e.g., ?, $, !) symbols.
For example, you could search for politic* to find poltic, politics, political, politicking, and so on.
Wildcard searching works similarly: a search for t??th will return results for teeth, tooth, tenth, and so on.
Opens a search box so that you can find particular words or phrases on a page. Very helpful for long PDFs.