 Hi, this is Hannah, and today I'm going to show you a really quick video on tips for searching strategically. Those four tips are, number one, no full sentences ever. Number two, intentionally choose the words that you search. Number three, include some synonyms to those words. And four, utilize proper search strategy that is using and or not, asterisk, quotation marks, etc. The top work we're going to be using as an example today is which type of diet is best for adults with type 2 diabetes, low carbohydrate, or low fat. The database we're going to be using as an example today is PubMed. Please connect to PubMed through the library's homepage. That way it'll turn on our subscriptions. Now back to tip one. So with tip one we have no full sentences ever, which means I'm not going to copy and paste my research question that you see below, which type of diet is best, etc., etc. Why am I not doing that? Because in that whole sentence, in that research question, I have words like which, best, with. Those words by themselves are meaningless. So that leads us to tip number two, intentionally choose the words you use to search, which means what are the core components of my topic. Diet, adults, type 2 diabetes, low carbohydrate, or low fat. So when I go into a database, whether it's Google, PubMed, etc., I am just using those key words. Now, before I start typing, remember, number three is include some synonyms with those words. Let's think about that as we type in our main concepts. Concept number one is diet, diet or nutrition. I'm also looking at adults. You could also add synonyms here like elderly or middle aged if you're looking at a specific age range. For this sake, I'm just going to use the word adult. I'm looking at type 2 diabetes. And the last component were the two different kinds of diets that I'm looking at, which is low carbohydrate or low fat. Now, if I find an article talking about both of these, that's fantastic. Or we'll give the option for the database to find either of those together or just one individually from each other either is fine. So or gives me more options, diet or nutrition, tomato, tomato, as long as it has something to do with and adults. So and is like glue has to be together diet and type 2 diabetes and low carbohydrate or low fat. Again, tomato, tomato or both of those being in my search is ideal. I just have over a thousand results again PubMed is specific to health and medicine and looks like a couple of these first ones look pretty promising.