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Accessing Anthropological Index Online
Instructions from the Anthropological Index
Web page
Year Published
Any field
Subject Headings
Keywords
Author
Title
Journal
Language
E-mailing of results
General notes on combining operators etc.
Printable version .pdf
Accessing Anthropological Index Online
From the Library's Home page at
http://www.utas.edu.au/library/
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Click on the Databases link in the left hand menu.
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Click on the A in the Alphabetic List and scroll for the Anthropological
Index.
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Click on the title to open the database.
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Select the Advanced Search page.

Instructions from the Anthropological Index
Web page
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Fill in the form above, then click on the "Search the
AI" button.
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Combinations will automatically be combined - So "zeitlyn"
in Author and "soothsayer" in title will find a work
by one of the anthropologists called Zeitlyn with the word soothsayer
in the title.
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Note that searches are NOT case-sensitive
Year Published
Checking these boxes selects the publication year to be searched.
If you do not know which year you must select all of them - to search
for all possible years. Note that if nothing is specified it will
automatically search files from the 1990s.
Any field
This will find the search term(s) entered wherever they occur
in the record. No special treatment is made of the terms (except
for 'and' '&' - which are treated as equivalent, and 'or' which
is not searchable).
Subject Headings
The three pop-up lists allow searchers to select from the same
headings that were used in the original printed index. This achieves
consistency with the back data, and gives some simple keyword-like
acces to the data. When resources permit a more detailed system
of keywording will be added to complement and make those headings
more useful for online searching.
The term "Other" is used in the following ways: Under
Continent and Region it is used to mean either no geographical area
was specified or more than one e.g. comparisions between Africa
and America or West and East Africa.
Under Subject it is used to mean either more than one
of the AIO subjects, (e.g. linguistics and archaeology, as in the
case of inscriptions), for articles of a theoretical nature or concerning
subjects only partially covered by AIO e.g. demography, human ecology,
statistics etc.
Keywords
In order to facilitate an article search, the Anthropological
Index Online has a keywords list that can be used for refined searches.
This allows the retrieval of articles even if the words are not
contained in the title. The Keywords list is largely based on the
British Museum, Museum of Mankind's library Thesaurus and the Library
of Congress reference handbooks. A preliminary look at the keywords
can be useful to identify areas and preferred terms used in the
indexing of AIO articles. The list includes the world's most important
ethnic groups, and archaeological sites, geographical areas, as
well as names of the scholars whose work has been indexed in AIO.
Most ethnic groups are listed under the most common terms used
in the anthropological literature. e.g. the Northwest Coast ethnic
group Kwakwaka'wakw, goes under the name of Kwakiutl, the Kenyan
group Abagusii can be found under Gusii, and the Siberian ethnic
group Vogul will be found under the voice Mansi, etc. Please note
that AIO ethnic names choice is purely functional to keep accuracy
and consistency standards that would not be possible to maintain,
should we follow the current rate by which ethnic groups change
their names. Ethnic groups themselves often present different spellings
for their name. AIO does not take a political stance in relation
to this choice.
Descriptive keywords are also included in the list. Descriptive
keywords cover the theoretical aspects of research. For example,
specific theories and/or methodologies go under 'Theory of...anthropology,
archaeology' etc. The same applies to authors'specific works. Marcel
Mauss's theory can be found for instance either under 'Work of Marcel
Mauss', 'Theory of anthropology' or 'History of anthropology' (all
descriptive keywords). More recent works are going to be found under
the authors' name with the forename always before the surname e.g
'Work of Clifford Geertz', the name on its own usually stands for
an obituary.
Anthropological Index 0nline does not cover the archaeology of
the northern hemisphere (Europe, the Balkans and Russia) after the
Middle Ages. This is unless this period's archaeological surveys
carried out in such countries are relevant for either theoretical
or methodological reasons.
A list of keywords is available as a single listing on one page
(warning 190k long)
Author
Terms entered here will search for author names. The default is
to look for whole names. Also note that publications by "institutional
authors" have the institution name treated as author. The back
data contains initials only so authors should be searched for either
by plain surname, or by putting initials before the surname i.e.
searching for "d zeitlyn" finds works by David Zeitlyn.
Note also that the early data has not been fully key-worded. New
data will include first names where they are available.
Title
This searches for terms in the article titles.
Journal
This searches for the journal title. The raw data contains both
full and contracted titles and both are searched if a term is entered
in the 'journal' field. A check box at the bottom allows you to
select the display of short title only. A list of all journal titles
is available. Apart from the publication year, all the search terms
can be restricted to search for whole words, for words beginning
or ending with the search term or to look anywhere in a word. Clicking
on the box to the right of the input box for each term will reveal
a list of the options. Note that if you choose 'anywhere' then truncation
is automatic - no '*' is necessary.
Language
Languages are searchable but only where the data exists - in some
of the older data the identity of some commoner languages was taken
to be obvious so has not been entered. English is the unmarked default.
Note that at present it is not possible to do "NOT" searching
(so, for example, you cannot opt to exclude non- English sources).
We are aware of the need to do this and are considering means to
enable it. Languages used include the following: Albanian, Armenian,
Belorussian, Bulgarian, Chinese, Czech, Dutch, French, German, Hungarian,
Japanese, Kazakh, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Serbo-Croat,
Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Turkish, Ukrainian
E-mailing of results
If an email address has been filled in on the search form then
it is possible for you to have the results emailed to you - once
an email address has been given, an extra button appears on the
results pages giving the option to have the search results emailed
to you.
General notes on combining operators etc.
As is stated on the main search page terms entered in different
fields will automatically be combined - So "zeitlyn" in
Author and "soothsayer" in title will find a work by one
of the anthropologists called Zeitlyn with the word soothsayer in
the title.
At present we cannot implement an "or" search between
fields, however, it is possible within a single field. Either the
word "or" or a comma should be used to separate the alternatives
to be searched for. In other words a search for "Nigeria or
Cameroon" in the title field will find all the entries that
have EITHER "Nigeria" OR "Cameroon" (OR BOTH)
in their title.
If two or more terms are entered then an implicit "AND"
is understood. Thus, a search for "Mambila Soothsay" in
the title field will find an article in which BOTH the string "Mambila"
AND the string "Soothsay" occur in the same field.
Note that only one operator is possible in a single field at the
moment, so it is not possible to do "x and y or z". Brackets
cannot be used to construct complex search terms. These types of
sophistication may be implemented at a later date but we need feedback
to persuade us that MANY people want them!
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