Keywords search free text words and phrases. When using Library Search or subject databases (some database are keyword databases), your keywords are normally matched against words in the author, title and abstract fields. Authors can use their natural language to describe their work (they may use different subject jargon or a variant spelling to your keywords), it can feel like a bit of a guessing game knowing which keywords to try. In reality your search will only retrieve results that match the keywords that you type in. It is vital to think about alternative terminology that authors may have used in order not to miss out on any research.
You have already started to identify some keywords and alternate words in your scoping search, here are some top tips for finding more:
Identifying other relevant systematic reviews:
A published systematic review should include at least one example of the search strategy used. This is a good way of identifying the search string, subject headings and keywords. If you found any relevant published systematic reviews you could look at the search strategies used in these reviews to identify further subject headings or keywords.
A controlled vocabulary is a standardised, pre-defined set of terms used by some databases to describe and categorise articles or information based on their content. It is used to ensure that searches retrieve all relevant results, even when the authors use different terms to those which you are using. This can be very helpful, and save a lot of time, as you are not having to guess which keywords an author may have used.
Controlled vocabulary may also be referred to as subjects, subject headings, subject terms, descriptors, thesaurus, or index terms, depending on which database you are using.
However, controlled vocabulary is at its most effective when you combine it with your own keywords. Using keywords alongside a controlled vocabulary means that you can pick up misspellings, plus any articles that an indexer may have missed (they are only human after all) and articles waiting to be indexed.
Different databases use different controlled vocabulary datasets, and they usually suggest the appropriate terms to you when you enter your search term. This is why it is important to search each database individually, rather than searching several databases across a supplier's platform. For example, if you search across the entire EBSCO platform, rather than individually searching EBSCO's databases (such as the British Education Index or Business Source Complete), then you won't find the most relevant information, as you won't be able to apply two different controlled vocabulary datasets to one search.
Databases and platforms that use controlled vocabulary include:
ASSIA, Social Sciences Database, Sociology Database, Sociological Abstracts, ERIC - Proquest Thesaurus
British Education Index (EBSCO) - Thesaurus of education terms
CAB Abstracts - CAB Subject Thesaurus
Child Development & Adolescent Studies (EBSCO) - Thesaurus of Education Terms
CINAHL - CINAHL headings
Compendex (Engineering Village) - Ei Thesaurus
Educational Abstracts (EBSCO) - Thesaurus of Education Abstracts (H. W. Wilson)
Educational Administration Abstracts (EBSCO) - Thesaurus of Education Terms
Embase - EMTREE (Embase Subject Headings)
ERIC (EBSCO) - ERIC descriptors
GreenFILE - (EBSCO) Green Thesaurus
Medline, The Cochrane Library - MeSH (Medical Subject Headings)
PsycInfo - APA Thesaurus
To find out more about the different databases and how to search them (including how to use the controlled vocabulary in them) see the Database Help below.