First-time users: REGISTER HERE FIRST! Created by the Chemical Abstracts Service of the American Chemical Society, this database contains chemical information searchable by chemical structure, molecular formula, and more. Watch these tutorials and webinars to improve your searching skills.
Web of Science Core Collection
A multidisciplinary index to the journal literature of the sciences. It includes all cited references captured from indexed articles in a variety of subjects including chemistry, biochemistry, materials science, medicine, pharmacology, and more. Includes the Index Chemicus and Current Chemical Reactions databases.
Discover how to successfully use the Web of Science database with these YouTube video tutorials.
ScienceDirect is the world's leading source for scientific, technical, and medical research. Explore journals, books and articles.
Contains more than 37 million citations and abstracts of biomedical literature. It does not include full text journal articles; however, links to the full text are often present when available from other sources, such as the publisher's website, PubMed Central (PMC), or Briggs Library. Citations primarily stem from the biomedicine and health fields, and related disciplines such as life sciences, behavioral sciences, chemical sciences, and bioengineering.
Check out these training resources from the NIH for videos on searching PubMed effectively, finding full-texts, saving research results, and more.
Videos by the NIH. Includes videos on how to navigate and effectively use the PubMed database.
ERIC (Education Resources Information Center) is an authoritative database of indexed and full-text education literature and resources. Sponsored by the Institute of Education Sciences of the U.S. Department of Education, it is an essential tool for education researchers of all kinds.
A resource for educators which contains abstracts and indexing from 230 peer-reviewed journals.
Citation managers are software that help you collect, organize, and share sources and research. Add information on a variety of sources, such as articles, books, videos, interviews, and more. Citation management tools, such as EndNote, can save you time by keeping track of citations and generating reference lists.
Want to check to see if Briggs has access to a specific journal? Go to the Briggs library homepage and click on "Find a Journal." Then, type in the name of the journal to find out if we have access, what years we have access to, and if we have print or online versions available.
If you ever see an article that is asking you to pay for access, don't pay! Instead, try Interlibrary Loan (ILL). Through ILL, you can submit a request for an article and the ILL team will work to get you a free (emailed) version.
To get to ILL, go to the Briggs Library homepage and click on InterLibrary Loan in the blue box.