Skip to Main Content

Biotechnology: Find Sources: Biotechnology

Search Tools for Biotechnology

Also known as research articles, or academic articles. Some journal articles are "peer reviewed," meaning they're reviewed by other experts before being published. 

When & Why to Use Articles:

  • You need information based on research and expertise.
  • You need detailed information that focuses on a narrow topic.
  • You need to find peer-reviewed material or ensure that the information you find is accurate.

Search for Articles on Biotechnology:

  • AccessScience
    • E-Book
    • Login Required
    • Video
    Best Bet
    An electronic version of the 9th edition of the McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Science and Technology. Includes research updates, biographies of scientists, late breaking news, links to evaluated web sites, images, learning resources, and study guides by topic.
  • Science (Gale in Context)
    • Login Required
    Best Bet
    Includes thousands of topic overviews, experiments, biographies, pictures, illustrations, and the latest scientific developments covered in articles from over 200 magazines and academic journals.
  • ScienceDirect
    • Login Required
    Best Bet

    Access to Elsevier journal subscriptions in the fields of science, technology, medicine, social sciences, business, and humanities.

  • Biological Science Collection
    • Login Required
    Articles, abstracts, and citations for research in biomedicine, biotechnology, zoology and ecology, and aspects of agriculture and veterinary science.
  • Business Source Complete
    • Login Required
    includes full-text business journals and magazines, covering all disciplines of business, including marketing, management, accounting, banking, finance and more. Also includes country reports.
  • Engineering Source
    • Login Required
    Coverage across all engineering disciplines, including biomedical, civil, electrical, mechanical, environmental, and software. Includes hundreds of full-text engineering journals, magazines and trade publications, plus books, conference papers and more.
  • Nature
    • Login Required
    Online edition of the weekly international science journal with archives going back to 1869.
  • Science Magazine
    • Login Required
    Includes Science from 1880 to the present, Science Xpress (for early breaking, electronic journal articles), Science Signaling, and more.
  • Scientific American
    • Login Required
    Access to Scientific American from 1910 to the present.

Research Skills & Tips: 

Why to Use and Browse Specific Biotech Journals:

  • To stay current in your field or search for topics.
  • Staying current with lab techniques and new discoveries in Biotech is especially important to your professional awareness and development.
  • Tip: find a few Biotech journals to follow and browse.

Research Skills & Tips: 

Scholarly books are usually based on academic research done by the author or authors. They can contain multiple chapters on different aspects of a particular topic, or they can focus entirely on one concept or idea.

When & Why to Use Scholarly Books:

  • You need to understand a complex topic. Books are generally easier to read than journal articles.
  • You need very in-depth analysis of a topic.
  • You need a broad understanding of one or more topics.
  • You need a summary of existing research on a topic.

Search for Books and E-Books on Biotechnology:

  • AccessScience
    • E-Book
    • Login Required
    • Video
    Best Bet
    An electronic version of the 9th edition of the McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Science and Technology. Includes research updates, biographies of scientists, late breaking news, links to evaluated web sites, images, learning resources, and study guides by topic.
  • Merck Index Online
    • Login Required
    Source of information on chemicals, drugs, and biologicals. It includes substance monographs, named reactions, and reference tables. It is regularly updated with accurate information curated by chemistry and pharmacology experts.

Research Skills & Tips:

Search for Sources

MC Library has access to different kinds of search tools: 

  • RaptorSearch searches across most of the information that you can access through MC Library. Find books, e-books, streaming audio and video, and DVDs and CDs, as well as articles and other electronic resources from databases available through the library.
  • Databases are collections of articles, videos, images, or other types of sources. Some databases cover only one research area, like psychology or English. Other databases cover multiple research areas and are called multidisciplinary databases. Some databases are based on source type, like photographs or videos, instead of research area.

Use the tabs in the Search Tools box on this page to find suggested search tools to use for a variety of types of sources. 

MC students, faculty, and staff can access all of our search tools and online resources from on- or off-campus.

Research Skills & Tips:

Unlike Google, library databases can't understand an entire sentence. You'll need to break your topic down into the most important ideas: the keywords. Keywords are individual words or short phrases that represent the main ideas in your topic, thesis, or research question. 

Example Question: How are proteomics and biomarkers related to treating human disease? 

Keywords: proteomics, biomarkers, "human disease"

After you've identified your main ideas and some keywords to start with, think of additional search terms for each concept. These can be synonyms, related ideas, broader terms, or narrower terms. Since a database will match only what you type, using different terms for similar ideas can help you find more articles. 

Example Search Terms: 

  • pharmaceutical: purification, compounding, "medicinal agents"
  • toxicology: toxicity, "metal exposure", "median lethal dose"
  • cell culture: tissue culture, biosynthesis, bioassay
  • genomics: genome, "gene expression", "DNA sequence", sequencing

Click on the research issue you're having below to see tips for addressing it:

I'm Not Finding Enough Sources

I'm Finding Too Many Sources

I'm Finding Irrelevant Sources

None of These Tips Solved My Research Issue


Not Finding Enough Sources

  • Type the word OR between related search terms to get results containing either term. Put the related search terms in parentheses.
    • Example: government and regulate and (internet or "social media")
    Diagram shows social media & internet highlighted
  • Use a truncation character (often the asterisk, *, but it can vary by search tool), which is a symbol added to the root of a word to tell the search tool that you want all forms of that word. 
    • Example: elect* will search for elect, election, elector, electoral, electorate, electing, etc.
  • Use a wildcard character (often the hash sign, #, but it can vary by search tool), which is a symbol that replaces any character in a word.
    • Example: wom#n will search for woman or women.

Finding Too Many Sources

  • Type the word AND between the main ideas in your search to get results containing all ideas.
    • Example: government and regulate and internet and "free speech"
    Diagram shows overlap between gov't & free speech

Finding Irrelevant Sources

  • Type the word NOT before a search term that you do not want your search results to contain.
    • Example: election not "united states"
    Diagram shows social media & internet highlighted
  • Type quotation marks around a specific phrase to get search results that contain only that exact phrase.
    • Example: "social media"
  • Use the search tool's filters to target search results that will meet your needs. You'll find filters on the search results screen. The exact location and filtering options varies by search tool.
    • Example: use a publication date filter to find sources published in the last five years.
    • Example: use a source type filter to find only articles or only videos.

If the options above did not help you find useful results, you may want to:

  • change your search terms,
  • select a different search tool,
  • make your topic broader or narrower, or
  • get research help from a librarian.

Research Skills & Tips:

After you've selected your search tool, identified keywords, and fixed research issues, it's time to choose your sources. It is common to get more search results than you will use, so you must evaluate the sources you find to choose the best ones for your research.

Start by scanning the search results to locate sources that fit your research question or need. The search results page will include information about each source, such as the title, year, and abstract, to help you determine its relevance.

Once you've found a source you'd like to use, evaluate its credibility by considering the evidence, source, context, audience, purpose, and execution of the source. Learn more on the Evaluate Information and Fake News guide linked below.


Research Skills & Tips:

Find Sources

"Find Sources." Magnifying Glass.

This page will help you choose where and how to search for your sources. As you search, use the tips on this page to help you evaluate each source you find.

Journals by Title

Want a particular journal, magazine, or newspaper, instead of an individual article? Use the Journals by Title feature in RaptorSearch. Search by publication title, such as Newsweek or Psychological Bulletin, or get a list of all journals on your topic by browsing through the journal categories.