Engineering 190 W - Foresta Julia Gelfand
Professional Communications in
the Technical World Engineering Librarian
Winter 2006 Science Library 228
949-824-4971
Building Research Skills
The UCI Libraries Homepage serves as a gateway
to all online resources that are used for teaching and research. This page will
direct you to the online databases and will give you access to all that is
defined by "Online
Resources":
There are two functions on this screen - to BROWSE assuming you know the title; and to SEARCH when you can search by title word or keyword. This new page allows you to search all online
resources collectively or by type:
Databases
Online Journals
News & Newspapers
Reference tools
Statistical
& Data Resources (mostly government information)
Connecting from
Off-Campus directions allow for
remote access.
FINDING BOOKS:
Online
Catalogs:
ANTPAC UC Irvine Libraries holdings (Langson
Library, Science Library, and Grunigen Medical
Library) - note format
MELVYL
UC-wide holdings (all 10 UC campuses) - easiest way to use InterLibrary Loan (ILL) is via MELVYL Request
WorldCat -
Global library holdings with links to UCI
Global Books in Print - directory of
books in print
Amazon.com - commercial inventory - can be
checked for items not in our collection and ordered via
SUBJECT GUIDES - available for each department in the Samueli School of Engineering to lead users to a variety of
information resources.
REFERENCE WORKS
Quick Reference
- leads users to a variety of online resources
Reference Universe - links to online
reference from print sources - reflecting different disciplines, not all in ANTPAC
I.
Professional Vocabulary - Dictionaries,
Encyclopedias, Handbooks, etc
Selected
works:
AccessScience - online equivalent of McGraw-Hill
Encyclopedia of Science & Technology
Encyclopedia
Britannica Online
Dictionary of computer science, engineering
and technology /
editor-in-chief, Phillip A. Laplante, Boca Raton, FL.
CRC Press, 2001, Science Library Reference, QA 76.15 D5258 2001
Images of technology: a pictorial dictionary
of Modern engineering research
/ Edited by Institute of Industrial Science, University of Tokyo, Science
Library Bar, TA9 I43 1999
CRC Engnetbase.com -
collection of eBooks; part of the CRCNetBase
collection of eBooks published by CRC Press
McGraw-Hill encyclopedia of engineering / Sybil P. Parker, editor-in-chief,
Van Nostrands
scientific encyclopedia /
Glenn D. Considine, editor: Peter H. Kulik, associate edoitor,
II. Technical Writing and
Communication
Selected current resources &
texts (SL = Science Library; LL = Langson Library)
Writing
Power: Communication in an
Writing and Speaking in the Technology
Professions: A Practical Guide / edited by David F. Beer,
Writing
from A to Z, 4th
ed. / Sally Barr Ebest.
A Student Guide to Writing at UCI, 11th ed./
John Hollowell.
Handbook of Technical Writing / Gerald J.Alred,
Charles T. Brusaw, Walter E. Oliu,
MIT
Guide to Science and Engineering Communication, 2nd ed. / James G. Paradis and Muriel L. Zimmerman.
Technical
Communication, 6th
ed. / Mike Markel. NY:
Technical Style / J.M. Haile,
Central, S.C.: Macatea Productions, 2001, SL-Bar, T11
H24 2001
Ethics in technical communication: a critique
and synthesis / Mike Markel,
Ethics in Technical Communication / Paul M. Dombrowski,
Technical Writing and Professional
Communication for Nonnative Speakers of English / Thomas N. Huckin,
Leslie A. Olsen,
IEEE
transactions on professional communication (journal)
III.
Citation format - be consistent and be aware
of how to cite materials available electronically
Style
manuals & writing guides - many other guides are found at all Reference Desks
IV.
Communications issues
A. Avoid plagiarism, be
ethical CITE, CITE, CITE!
Plagiarism: what it is and how
to recognize and avoid it. A
guide prepared by the Writing Tutorial Services,
http://www.indiana.edu/~wts?plagiarism.html
B. Consult http://www.turnitin.com
, a plagiarism detection program with directions at
http://otel.uis.edu/yoder/302turnitin.htm
C. Be consistent
D. Work on your presentation
skills
·
very
important now
·
when
interviewing for job
·
at your
job as a professional
V.
Locating information / conducting research
A. Traditional Print Sources -
books, journals
1. Library of Congress classification ranges for browsing
Qs, Ts, TA-TK7800s at Science Library
HD range at Langson
Library
2. Reference Works @ Science Library Reference (2nd floor) -
arranged in call number order
3. Bound journals are in the SL Drum (round part) on floors 4-6 in call
number sequence
B. Using Databases (subject and
keyword searching) - use the UCI eLinks icon to
determine fulltext access
1. Compendex (now on the Ei
Village platform) -
Engineering Index -
2. ACM
Digital Library - Full text of ACM journals, magazines and
conference proceedings
3. INSPEC (OVID) electrical engineering, computer science,
physics and the ARCHIVE
4. BIOSIS
(ISI) - covers the life
sciences, environmental sciences
5. IEEE Xplore - Full text of IEEE journals, conference
proceedings, and standards
6. Web of Science
- Science
Citation Index going back to 1945 - no conference proceedings
-
general
search
-
forward
searching
-
lateral
searching via "Related Articles" feature
-
cited
reference search engine who is citing who. Unique
feature
7. Business
Source Premier - business/management databases
8.
Factiva
- full-text
coverage of business literature and trends
Additional databases
relevant to the course assignments:
9. PubMed MEDLINE clinical medicine, health sciences,
dentistry, pharmacology, etc.
10.
Expanded Academic
ASAP - a lot of full-text (PDF, Web-based, or plain text with no images).
11. Lexis Nexis Academic Universe- full-text
12. Environmental
Science & Pollution Management (CSA - Use Illumina)
13. Philosophers'
Index - to support the study of ethics
14. Lecture
Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) - this series is by Springer - well
indexed in INSPEC but not always with eLinks - you
can go directly to the Springer website and enter the volume # and scroll down
to the particular paper, proceeding, chapter or lecture
15. Transport
- major database covering all facets of transportation - after searching, you
will have to consult ANTPAC. Remember
that the database has different time segments to search.
Specialized
Engineering Databases -
noted on the Engineering
Subject Guides
C. Hints for specific topics and groups
1.
Bluetooth
Technology - recommend searching INSPEC, IEEE Xplore,
ACM Digital Library, Web of Science
2.
Smart
Roads - recommend Compendex, Transport, Web of
Science, Environmental Science & Pollution Management databases, and the ASCE Digital Library of
civil engineering publications
3.
MEMS
Technology - recommend INSPEC, Compendex, IEEE Xplore, Web of Science, and more specialized databases that
cover unique subject areas - ie) BIOSIS, PubMed, etc
4.
DVD
Technology - recommend INSPEC, Compendex, IEEE Xplore, Factiva & Business Source Premier
5.
CD-RW
Drives - recommend the INSPEC, IEEE Xplore, Factiva
& Business Source Premier, maybe some newspaper sources listed on the News
& Newspaper Subject Guide
D. Patent information
U. S. Patent
and Trademark Office
Official source for
LexisNexis Academic Universe
http://web.lexis-nexis.com/universe
Under "Legal Research" is a Patent Research section for
searching of Patents (1971 to date), by individual category of Design Patents,
Plant Patents or Utility Patents. Can also search by keyword,
assignee, inventor, patent number, classification, and lawyer.
Other valuable patent resources:
Patent
Searching Tutorial from the
European Patent
Office - index of patents originating in
Freepatentsonline
- Fulltext and images of US patents beginning with
patent number 4,000,000
Scirus
- Indexes over 13 million patents from the
Additional research resources
1.
Subject
Guides for Engineering
and Information &
Computer Science
E.
Internet
Search Engines vs. metasites - evaluate
resource - consider domain - .edu, .com, .gov, .org, etc.
Thinking Critically about World Wide Web Resources - http://www.library.ucla.edu/libraries/college/help/critical/index.htm)
1.
Authority control - authorship - who, affiliation, where
2. Currency
- note the date, the update, does it reflect the right period of time
3.
Evaluate the source - establish criteria that is meaningful to covering the
topic
4. Citing
Internet resources - URL & date of the search
5.
Capturing and citing
6. Copying
F.
Specific Resources and Hints
1.
Government Information - major source - consult
ANTPAC or visit Reference desk on the First Floor of the Langson
Library. For Federal
US sources, check the websites of specific agencies such as the U.S.
Department of Energy Web page or specific state agencies at http://www.ca.gov/state/portal/myca_homepage.jsp
2. Professional Societies publications investigate IEEE, ACM, SPIE,
ASEE, CNI, IFIP etc.
3. Work from an outline - begin
with an anticipated title, write the prospectus indicating the hypothesis and
leaving
notations
for areas where research or information is still needed.
4.
For
assistance in preparing presentations
you may find the following resources helpful in preparing a Powerpoint
presentation that can capture your ideas with some visual elements including
images, graphs, photographs, etc. For
some background in creating an appropriate presentation, consider the needs of
your audience and play to that group.
You may find the following resources and tutorials helpful:
Slide Your Way into Spectacular Presentations - prepared by a UCI
colleague, Caryn Neiswender (https://webfiles.uci.edu/cneiswen/ppt/
Mastering Powerpoint
2000 - Science Library Bar T385
.M8863 1999
And tutorials at:
http://www.hostos.cuny.edu/library/HHCL_New_Web/Teach_Learn_tutor_ppoint.htm
http://www.cew.wisc.edu/accessibility/tutorials/pptscratch-text.htm
Sources for images
include: Google Image Search
and other search interfaces
G. Additional Information & Assistance:
6.
Contact Liaison Librarian -
7.
Consult
Reference Desk at either Science (9-6) or Langson
(9-9) Libraries and (1-5 on weekends)
8.
Use Ask a Librarian to get
help via the Chat/Online service, eMail Reference or
to schedule a Research Consultation