
Note
This system does not identify documents with titles that
contain contractions (e.g., isn't, can't, what's and so on) or possessives
(e.g., reader's, farmer's and so on). Therefore, please remove the entire
word in your query when you search for a title that contains a contraction
or possessive.
Sample for Contraction
Title you seek: "Biotechnology
isn't science" .
Use these search terms: "Biotechnology
science" .
Sample for Possessive
Title you seek: "Are
American's food labels Y2K ready" .
Use these search terms: " Are
food labels Y2K ready" .
When to search by title
This search field can help you when you know the title
of the document and want to learn the document number and full citation
for it.
In a limited way, it can also help you identify documents
about subject matter of interest to you. However, you can conduct
your most thorough subject-matter search by using the Subject Terms
field rather than the Title field. For details, see the "Helps"
section of the Subject Terms field.
Tips for searching by title
When you know the exact title, simply enter it
and press the "Search" button.
When you know only part of the title, you may find
the document by entering one or more of the title terms that you know.
Example:
extension information
The search system will look for these terms in titles
throughout the database, then retrieve titles that contain those terms
anywhere in the title. For example, entering the phrase above
may result in titles such as:
"The information needs of extension constituents"
"Making information useful on the world wide web: uses of the web in
extension"
However, when you use quotation marks and enter:
"extension information"
the search system will return only those articles containing
the exact phrase in the title. Examples:
"A model of farm-level demand for extension information"
"Identifying extension information delivery methods for environmental
issues"
