Tuesday, 28 April 2015

Finding my voice

My first assignment for Information Discovery was a report on Web-Scale Discovery Platforms. While I found this whole assignment difficult, the hardest part for me was writing the report itself. I come from the essay world - these are what I'm used to. I like the structure of them, the ease of writing that I've always felt with essays. With an essay, you pick your argument, you find your points to argue through your research, and then you argue it. There's no "you" in the essay, no feelings or opinions or judgement. A report, though, is entirely different. This is all about you. It's awful!

I've really had to try to forget everything that I've been trained to do in my previous studies. The whole idea of putting me, or mine, or I into an assignment sends a shiver down my spine. But I did it, and I hated it, and I don't think that I did very well but it's done now and I'm moving on. 

One advantage of looking at Web-Scale Discovery Platforms in my first assignment is that I'm probably in a better position going into the next assignment than some others in the class - now that I know what discovery platforms are (they're the single-box search engine that connects the library collection with the databases that they have access to into one search) I think that I'll be able to use them in a more efficient way when searching for information on my next assignment.

The next assignment is a critically-annotated bibliography, where we find at least fifteen sources on a subject for a 'client' and write up a short abstract for each of them. Because I work for a doctor one day a week, I hit him up for a topic and I'm now researching the use of BOTOX in relieving migraines. It's an interesting subject, but I have no idea what a lot of the articles I'm reading even mean! Medical journals are very technical, written with people who are working in the field in mind, so I think that a lot of it is going to go completely over my head. It's going to be an interesting challenge.

1 comment:

  1. I hope you are using Pubmed – do your search [botox AND migraine headache] then look for evidence-based citations. Look at the top right of the screen and you will see ‘Article types’, click on that, look for ‘Systematic reviews’ then limit your search to that. That will give you these two, open the link for the first one, and on the right hand side are ‘related citation’ that look useful as well

    Critical analysis of the use of onabotulinumtoxinA (botulinum toxin type A) in migraine.
    Robertson CE, Garza I.
    Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat. 2012;8:35-48. doi: 10.2147/NDT.S17923. Epub 2012 Jan 13.
    6.
    OnabotulinumtoxinA for treatment of chronic migraine: pooled results from the double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled phases of the PREEMPT clinical program.
    Dodick DW, Turkel CC, DeGryse RE, Aurora SK, Silberstein SD, Lipton RB, Diener HC, Brin MF; PREEMPT Chronic Migraine Study Group.
    Headache. 2010 Jun;50(6):921-36. doi: 10.1111/j.1526-4610.2010.01678.x. Epub 2010 May 7.

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