Guide to Research Online

Looking for Information

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Search Engines
Search Directories
All-in-one Searches

Search Engines
The most common way of finding information on the Web is to use a search engine. Search engines rely on computer programs called robots or spiders, which crawl the Web visiting sites. The words found on each page at every Web site are logged by the robot or spider into a database. When you type a word into the search "box," the search engine scans the database and returns a file with links to all the Web sites that contain the "keyword" you typed in. Because the databases are huge, a search can return a list of thousands of Web sites. But there are ways of refining the search.

FOR EXAMPLE: You are looking for information on Gothic fan vaults.

If you simply type into the search box the words Gothic fan vault, the search engine will return every page on which one or more of these words appear. Because each of these words can occur in many other contexts other than the one you are interested in, the search will return many irrelevant sites. You can narrow the search in the following ways: