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How Search Works on Access Science

The search engine is a state-of-the-art tool that runs in conjunction with
a layer of semantic metadata across the content that makes up AccessScience.
When a user searches for information on AccessScience, the search engine
looks for matches with the metadata so that it is not relying on matching exact
words when they appear in the content but rather on the true meaning of the
concepts detailed in the content. These concepts can occur anywhere on the
site -- Encyclopedia Articles, Research Updates, Biographies, News, and more.
Therefore, users can find all the relevant discussions of the topic they are
looking for, even if named differently in different resources.
In the infrequent cases in which a user cannot find the results he or she
is looking for using the semantic search engine, he or she can perform a
full-text search, accessible via the "Search Options" page, that allows the
Boolean connectors "and", "not" and "or", and that searches through each word
in the data set. Users can also limit their search to just one or many content
types or one or many topics.
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