SciFinder-n for Agriculture, Environmental Sciences, Food Science and Engineering

A guide to how SciFinder or SciFinder Scholar can be used in Agriculture, especially Soil Science, Environmental Sciences, various fields of Engineering and related fields.

Top Tips for Searching in SciFinder-n

The default search is a References search, looking at the literature. Type your terms into the search box, using AND between them such as phytoremediation AND heavy metals AND deep flooding 

first search screen of Scifinder-n, showing a search box, and side bars for All, Substances, Reaction, Suppliers, Sequences, and Retrosynthesis

Your results will look something like this. The terms you searched with will be highlighted, they will show the citation and abstract of the article, a link at the left foot for full text and links at the right foot for citing articles and a citation map. 

Retrieval example with highlighted search terms, citing articles and a citation map button on the lower right and a link to full text on the lower left.

Just above the list of references, there is a dropdown menu that will allow you to sort the retrieved set by relevance, times cited, newest, oldest, and the like. 

shows dropdown menu with sorting by relevance, times cited, publication date

Each record will show Concepts (other related terms), Substances (these might be metals, chemicals or drugs), and Cited Documents links under the abstract in each record. You will note the journal citation, company affiliation of the [first] author and some references to similar articles at the foot of each. 

Sorting Results

In the example below, the search set has been sorted by how often the works have been cited by other works. Choose "times cited" on the dropdown menu to do this.

Having been cited often is one way that important authors, papers, and journals may be identified (although it is important to remember that someone's work may have been cited for an error).

shows the same set, sorted by times cited

 

Searching in SciFinder--Fill in the Blanks

The developers of the database have worked hard to make SciFinder's search pages very explicit, by including boxes for specificly required fields. For example, the author search requires last name, then asks for first name and initial; you may search with just the last name, if it is distinctive enough, and then choose from the resulting list.

Journal title searches generalize the title, so that if you put in Soil Science Journal, you will also get variations such as Soil Science Society of America Journal. You may search using journal title abbreviations, but don't use punctuation: JES, not J.E.S.

CAS Lexicon

SciFinder includes a subject list or thesaurus, called CAS Lexicon,  as a way to find better terms for searches. It is normally shown below the search boxes, and if you click through and put a term in, it will give you more information or alternative terms.

screen capture showing location of CASLexicon