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| Database Coverage
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Every database contains only certain types and amounts of information, a characteristic called coverage. This information can typically be found
in the database itself under links such as "About [name of database]," "Database information," "Title list,"
or "Sources," etc. Web-based databases are typically accessed from a link that is annotated with some information about coverage. Databases published in paper form normally locate this information in the front of each
volume or in an introduction.
Consider the following elements of database coverage:
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What kinds of documents? Journals,
magazines, books, book chapters, dissertations, audio files, statistical
tables, images, Web pages, software applications?
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Which disciplines? Sociology,
music, chemistry, all, none?
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What time periods? The current
year? 1960-1998? How often is the database updated? Hourly, daily,
weekly, monthly, annually?
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What languages? English
only? Other languages?
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Which publication types? Scholarly?
Popular? Trade? All three? Others?
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What is included in the record? A whole
article or chapter (full-text) or just a brief description (bibliographic
citation and abstract)? Publisher and title?
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