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FSCI: 3401 Forensic Science Research

Use this guide to learn and review techniques for efficient database searching, how to determine a primary source, how to read a citation, and how to create a literature review.

Primary Sources

A primary source is an original document or item.  It is the raw material or first-hand information.  In the natural sciences (biology, chemistry, etc.), the results of an experiment are considered raw data.  Therefore, journal articles that present this original raw data are considered primary sources

Primary research articles can usually be identified by a commonly used format.  If the article contains the following elements, it is usually a primary source document:

  • Methods (or Materials & Methods)
  • Results (usually containing charts, graphs, equations)
  • Discussion or Conclusion

Sometimes a short research article will not contain these separate components.  In this case, look at the wording used.  Phrases such as "we tested," "we used," and  "in our study, we measured" will usually tell you if original research is being reported. 

Primary Source  Examples & Characteristics
Journals or Periodical Articles

Reports the results of original experiments. Articles may report on a single experiment, or multiple experiments to place them into context. Review articles typically report on more than one experiment and provide a nice overlook of their results. 

Conference Papers

 An important avenue for reporting new research or developments. Papers presented may or may not be subject to editorial scrutiny. Conference papers can be: not published at all, published only in abstract form, published in advance of the conference as a pre-print, published in book form, or as a special issue of a journal.

Reports

Individual publications reporting research.

They may report internal research within an organization, or research done by an individual or organization under contract to a client. They can be: freely available, available only to members of an organization, only available by purchase. Sometimes the information from the report will also be published in a journal article, but more often, the report is the only source of the information. Many governmental reports (full-text) are now being made available via the Internet.

Patents Provides research information on new products or processes. Once published, patent information is freely available, but rarely republished in journal articles.

 

Secondary Sources

A secondary sources is something written about a primary sources.  Think of this as second hand information.  Secondary source materials can be articles in newspapers or popular magazines, book or movie reviews, or articles found in scholarly journals that evaluate or criticize someone else's original research. 

 

Secondary Source

Examples & Characteristics
Review Journals        Generally contain "Annual Review," "Current Opinion," or "Advances in..." to alert readers that these are secondary source publications.
Review Articles  Articles that summarize the current literature on a specific topic.  Usually, these articles are synthesizing and comparing the results of multiple primary sources.
Textbooks    Can be specialized or a general overview of a topic
Articles/Indexes & Databases These can be abstracting or citation databases. 

How can I tell?

Scientific and other peer reviewed journals are excellent sources for primary research sources. However, not every article in those journals will be an article with original research. Some will include book reviews and other materials that are more obviously secondary sources.

More difficult to differentiate from original research articles are review articles. Both types of articles will end with a References page (or Works Cited). Review articles are often as lengthy or even longer that original research articles. What the authors of review articles are doing is analyzing and evaluating current research or investigations related to a specific topic, field, or problem. They are not primary sources since they review previously published material. They can be helpful for identifying potentially good primary sources, but they aren't primary themselves. If it is a review article instead of a research article, the abstract should make that clear. If there is no abstract at all, that in itself may be a sign that it is not a primary resource.

Asa H. Gordon Library

Savannah State University 2200 Tompkins Rd Savannah, GA 31404 Phone: (912) 358-4324 Reference Text Line: (912) 226-2479