Scientists consult a wide variety of sources when working on research project. At the beginning of a project, it is helpful to collect background resources that provide helpful contextual information. After gathering insights from background resources, move to chemistry databases to find scholarly, peer-reviewed resources.
While databases do provide good scientific resources, they also provide materials such as magazine articles, trade journals, and conference proceedings, among other resource types. It is important to recognize that different literature types (magazines, journals, etc.) have different roles to play when conducting research. The graphic below outlines the different types of sources found in databases.
Magazines and trade publications might be good resources for collecting background information, but scholarly, peer-reviewed articles will provide research findings that have been evaluated by other experts in the field. Choose sources that align with your project's goals.
Science Magazine Example: National Geographic
Science Magazines are a type of secondary source, and science magazines can provide good background information when starting a project. You might not be able to cite the magazine in your final project, but use the content to gather ideas.
Trade Journal Example: Physics Today
Trade journals will predominantly provide secondary sources; however, some trade journals might provide short technical reports of an author's primary research findings. Evaluate each article on it's own terms to discern if it is a primary or secondary source.
Scholarly, Peer-Reviewed Example: Nature
Scholarly journals will provide a mix of primary and secondary sources. For example, a journal might contain several review articles, which are a secondary sources, and several original research articles, which are primary sources. Read carefully to discern whether you are consulting a primary or secondary source.
In addition to falling into one of the material type categories listed above (journal, book, etc.), scientific resources also fall into one of these three categories: tertiary, primary, or secondary literature. A majority projects will use a mix of these source types, while others will only rely on primary sources. Consult your project's guidelines for insights in choosing the best materials for your work.
Tertiary Sources: Sources that index, compile, abstract, or outline other materials.
Primary Sources: Primary sources report events as they originally occurred and convey original thinking, report new discoveries, or share new information.
Secondary Sources: Sources that offer an analysis, evaluation, or restatement of primary sources.
Adapted from content created by Kathryn Eckler.