Search
Tips
CogWeb features the following dedicated search engines:
All engines present the following basic format. To perform a search, type what you are looking for into the search box: This search will find the word "consciousness" in all documents on CogWeb and display the first five results. (Outside of the Search Tips page, searches display the first hundred results.) There are several ways of getting either more specific or more general search results: |
Use multiple
words Example: conscious mind |
|
Use similar
words Example: metaphor blending figuration |
|
Use quotation
marks Example: "animal play" rhesus |
|
Use "sounds
like" Example: Povinello |
|
Use plus
(+) or minus (-) Syntax: +"cognitive" -"evolution" |
|
Use field
searches (title, desc, keys, body, alt, url)
Syntax: field:text or field:"text text" |
|
Use wildcards
Syntax: te*t |
Use
multiple words
Multiple words are useful
both for narrowing and for broadening searches.
Use
related terms
Since different authors
may use slightly different terminologies to discuss the same topic, it
may be useful to enter several related terms:
Use
quotation marks
If you want to look for
documents that contain a phrase and one or more words, you can use
quotation marks:
Use
"sounds like"
Make sure your search terms
are spelled correctly. If you're not sure of the spelling, check the "sounds
like" box and the search engine will attempt to find words that sound similar
to your search terms:
Use
plus (+) or minus (-)
Use a plus sign when your
search term or phrase must appear in the search results. Use a minus sign
to indicate undesirable term(s). The plus sign tells the search engine
that a certain word or phrase is required in the search results, and a
minus sign indicates that a word or phrase must be absent in the search
results.
Use
field searches
Field searches allow you
to create specific searches for words that appear in a specific part of
a document. A field search can be performed on body text (body:), title
text (title:), alt text (alt:), meta description (desc:), meta key words
(keys:) or URL (url:). The field name should be in lowercase and immediately
followed by a colon. There should be no spaces between the colon and the
search term.
The field searches can be followed by a word or phrase. Phrases must be contained within quotation marks. For field searches, leave the radio button in the "Any word" position.
Use
wildcards
Wildcard searches can expand
the number of matches for a particular request. The *
character is used as the wildcard character. For instance, searching for
wh*
will find the words what,
why,
when,
whether,
and any other word that starts with wh:
Searching for *her* will find the words here, whether, together, gathering, and any other word that contains her anywhere in the word:
Wildcards may be combined with the standard plus (+) and minus (-) modifiers, quotes for phrases, as well as the field search specifiers. +wh* -se*ch will find all pages which have a word that starts with wh and which does not contain a word that starts with se and ends with ch:
"wh* are" will find the phrases where are, what are, why are, etc.:
You can use masks to find telephone numbers and other regular expressions: