 Okay, so the goal isn't to find as many articles as you can on your topic. The tool you're using tends to give us a lot of articles that aren't related to what we type in. So the goal is to filter using the sidebar and using extra keywords to get as accurate as possible. So whenever you're doing this type of research, you always want to overlap one thing on another. The most common thing I have is somebody coming to me and they're like, I want to research diabetes. Well, what about diabetes? Find out what that second thing is. When you start looking at these articles, the subject headings will have the controlled language for what you're searching. So even though I put diabetes, the controlled language is diabetes mellitus type two. So if I click this, it will automatically enter it in that box for me with the letters M M before it. I'm going to add the word exercise and I'm going to hit search. You're going to get your results and then you're going to look in this left sidebar and I see my earliest result is from 1980. This will always default to the earliest result. You want to change it so that it is the last five years at least last three years. If you get a lot of results and then I get 814 results, I click the full text box and I get 156 results and then I click the academic journals box and I get 148 and I feel like 148. I can still go through these. It looks like five pages of articles and I can skim the titles and I can skim the summaries.