Master Lesson 2 Advanced Search Visualization and Query



![What Matters In My Search Query? Every word matters. 1 Try searching for [who], What Matters In My Search Query? Every word matters. 1 Try searching for [who],](https://slidetodoc.com/presentation_image/3bf66b66b7f772fa283b12102d9e9b9b/image-4.jpg)



![Arrow Navigation: Autocomplete ● Navigate among autocomplete suggestions ● Try the [elk yellowstone] search, Arrow Navigation: Autocomplete ● Navigate among autocomplete suggestions ● Try the [elk yellowstone] search,](https://slidetodoc.com/presentation_image/3bf66b66b7f772fa283b12102d9e9b9b/image-8.jpg)
![What Matters In My Search Query? 1 Every word matters. Try searching for [who], What Matters In My Search Query? 1 Every word matters. Try searching for [who],](https://slidetodoc.com/presentation_image/3bf66b66b7f772fa283b12102d9e9b9b/image-9.jpg)























- Slides: 32

Master Lesson 2 Advanced Search, Visualization, and Query Formulation Created by: Daniel M Russell, Ph. D Tasha Bergson-Michelson Trent Maverick

Tips For Better Searches 1 Keep it simple. Describe what you want in as few terms as possible. 2 Think of how the page you want will be written. Use words that are likely to appear on the page. 3 Use descriptive, specific words. Avoid general or common words.

Think Before You Search What am I looking What do I want? What am I trying to find out? for? How would I talk about this? What keywords could I use in my search query? How would someone else talk about this? How can I describe Which of these keywords are common or general words? Which would be more this better? specific? Are there better words I could use? What kind of results am I looking for? Do I want a definition, a database, a list, a map, an image, a video, or something else?
![What Matters In My Search Query Every word matters 1 Try searching for who What Matters In My Search Query? Every word matters. 1 Try searching for [who],](https://slidetodoc.com/presentation_image/3bf66b66b7f772fa283b12102d9e9b9b/image-4.jpg)
What Matters In My Search Query? Every word matters. 1 Try searching for [who], [the who], and [a who] .

What Matters In My Search Query? 1 Every word matters. 2 Order matters. Try searching for [who], [the who], and [a who] Try searching for [blue sky] and [sky blue] .

What Matters In My Search Query? 1 Every word matters. 2 Order matters. 3 Capitalization does not matter. Try searching for [who], [the who], and [a who] Try searching for [blue sky] and [sky blue] Try searching for [barack obama] and [Barack Obama]

What Matters In My Search Query? 1 Every word matters. 2 Order matters. 3 Capitalization does not matter. 4 Punctuation does not matter. Try searching for [who], [the who], and [a who] Try searching for [blue sky] and [sky blue] Try searching for [barack obama] and [Barack Obama] Try searching for [red: delicious! apple? ] and [red delicious apple]
![Arrow Navigation Autocomplete Navigate among autocomplete suggestions Try the elk yellowstone search Arrow Navigation: Autocomplete ● Navigate among autocomplete suggestions ● Try the [elk yellowstone] search,](https://slidetodoc.com/presentation_image/3bf66b66b7f772fa283b12102d9e9b9b/image-8.jpg)
Arrow Navigation: Autocomplete ● Navigate among autocomplete suggestions ● Try the [elk yellowstone] search, and use the arrow keys to view the “I’m Feeling Lucky” result
![What Matters In My Search Query 1 Every word matters Try searching for who What Matters In My Search Query? 1 Every word matters. Try searching for [who],](https://slidetodoc.com/presentation_image/3bf66b66b7f772fa283b12102d9e9b9b/image-9.jpg)
What Matters In My Search Query? 1 Every word matters. Try searching for [who], [the who], and [a who] 2 Order matters. Try searching for [blue sky] and [sky blue] 3 Capitalization does not matter. Try searching for [barack obama] and [Barack Obama] 4 Punctuation does not matter. Try searching for [red: delicious! apple? ] and [red delicious apple] * There are some exceptions! Can you think of any? Click here for a few examples.

Explore Advanced Search Check out the Advanced Search page with a partner.

Finding Exact Quotes What poem has this line? Help me shatter this darkness How can you fix this search?

Use " " to Find Exact Quotes Advanced Search demonstrates how to do it:

Use " " to Find Exact Quotes You can do the same thing in Basic Search:

Searching When You Need Synonyms Just typing in synonyms brings back pages with both words: How can you find either/or?

Use OR to Find Either/Or (or Both) ● Advanced Search solution: ● Basic Search solution:

When an Idea Is Getting in the Way You want to read sites about penguins. What if you want the animal, not the team?

- Use to Say NOT that Word ● Advanced Search solution ● Basic Search solution

Finding a Particular Type of File You remember reading on a blog about a wonderful Google Earth map of Louis and Clark's expedition. You remember it was a. kmz file, but nothing else.

Use filetype: ● Advanced Search solution ● Basic Search solution:

When You Know the Site, But Not the Page You want to find OFFICIAL answers about scratches on your i. Pod. How do you search only Apple. com for answers?

Use site: ● Advanced Search solution: ● Basic Search solution:

You Want Numbers Within a Range You want information on upcoming Olympics. How do you search for the Olympics in 2012 -2022? A bit inconvenient?

Use Number Range (#. . #) ● Advanced Search solution: ● Basic Search solution:

Basic Search's * vs. AROUND and NEAR Both * and AROUND allow you to ask for search terms that are near each other. For example, viewing different versions of Emma Goldam's famous quote:

AROUND(#) or NEAR(#) The AROUND operator lets you specify that one search term must be within a specified number of words of another search term. This weeds out pages where the terms are both there, but far apart from each other and therefore not related. For example, Cracked. com published an article claiming that T. S. Eliot plagairized much of "The Waste Land, " including stealing a line from Shakepeare: Eliot: "The Chair she sat in, like a burnished throne / Glowed on the marble" Shakespeare: "The barge she sat in, like a burnish'd throne / Burn'd on the water. " How would you check out this issue? Source: http: //www. cracked. com/article_17198_5 -great-men-who-built-their-careers-on-plagiarism. html#ixzz 1 DUH 6 SSWh

Wildcard (*) Can be used as a substitution for words or letters; Broadens your search * is used within quotation marks, in the middle of a phrase, to "fill in the blank. " Examples: • Driv* • wom*n • Hon*r (to include honor and honour) • “Harry Potter and the * of fire”

OR Can be used to search synonyms of a word Examples: • Soldier OR veteran • Cars OR automobiles

What Would Make Me Happy? Stop and think for a moment about what your perfect answer will look like: 1. WHO cares about what I care about? Who do I trust to give me the information I need? 2. WHAT words would I use to describe it, what words would my trusted source use? Which would be most common? 3. WHERE would my trusted source publish this information? 4. WHY would someone use one format or another to communicate this information? 5. HOW will I know when I found what I want?

Think About Using Context Terms Are there any concepts that describe what you want that would actually appear on the page? ● Information about Michael Jackson o [Michael Jackson fan site] o [Michael Jackson official] ● A collection of information about an aspect of science fiction o [science fiction database OR list OR index OR archive] ● A more academic look at democracy in South America o [democracy south america bibliography OR “works cited”]

Try Visualizing Who are the two main actors in the film Desk Set? Visualize the source that has the answer. What is it? ● IMDB. com o [desk set site: imdb. com] ● Most common wording in articles: “…the movie Desk Set, starring…” o [desk set starring] ● A movie poster showing the actors o [desk set] in Google Images

This lesson was developed by: Trent Maverick Tasha Bergson-Michelson This lesson is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share. Alike license. You can change it, transmit it, and show it to other people. Just always give credit to Google. com ("Attribution"), and make sure that any works you make based on these lessons are also under the same Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike license ("Share-Alike"). http: //creativecommons. org/licenses/by-sa/3. 0/legalcode.

This lesson was developed by: Daniel Russell Tasha Bergson-Michelson Trent Maverick This lesson is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share. Alike license. You can change it, transmit it, show it to other people. Just always give credit to Google. com ("Attribution"), and make sure that any works you make based on these lessons are also under the same Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike license ("Share-Alike"). http: //creativecommons. org/licenses/by-sa/3. 0/legalcode.