Food Science & Technology

Three Suggested Databases for FST

Other Databases to Try

OSU Libraries Catalog

OSU Libraries Catalog find books, journals (not journal articles), videos, maps at OSU

Food Science & Technology materials generally fall into the "S", "TP" and "TX" call number range and are located on the 1st floor of The Valley Library.

Encyclopedias, Manuals & Dictionaries

The international dictionary of food & nutrition/Kenneth N. Anderson and Lois E. Anderson. REF TX349.A236 1993

Handbook of brewing / edited by Fergus G. Priest, Graham G. Stewart..  TP570 .H23 2006   

Encyclopedia of food science and technology, 2nd ed. TP368.2.E62 2000

Encyclopedia of common natural ingredients used in food, drugs, and cosmetics/Albert Y. Leung, Steven Foster.  QD415.A25 L48 2003

Encyclopedia of food microbiology/editor-in-chief, Richard K. Robinson; editors, Carl A. Batt, Pradip D. Patel. QR115.E53 2000

Encyclopedia of food science/[edited by] Martin S. Peterson, Arnold H. Johnson. TP368.2.E55

Encyclopedia of food science and technology/Y.H. Hui, editor-in-chief. (4 vol.) REF TP368.2.E62 2000

Summit catalog

Find books at academic libraries throughout Oregon and Washington.  Links from the OSU Libraries Online Catalog allow you to duplicate a search in Summit, and if the item is available at another library, you can request it and it will be delivered within three days to the Valley Library circulation desk.

FST Websites

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations

USDA Economics Statistics System - Cornell University

U.S. Department of Agriculture

U.S. Food and Drug Administration Nutrient Data Laboratory

American Chemical Society

American Society for Enology & Viticulture

Institute of Food Technologists

Science Links by Tag

New Science Links

Searching for Journal Articles on a Topic

To search for a topic you will need to use an article database (not the e-journals list - more about using e-journals below).  

Find a good database.  Each database focuses on a particular subject. 

Break your topic down.  Article databases often work best when you put a single idea in each search box.  For example, the research topic "what is the best plant spacing for soybeans in Oregon" could be broken down into three main ideas - Soybean, plant density, and Oregon.  Each of these ideas would go in their own search box or be separated by "and."

Use Synonyms.  Scientists often refer to words in a variety of different terms than you may be used to.  Try different search words to come up with the best results.  For example, plant spacing could also be called plant density, crop density, or intraplant competition.

Find the article.  Not all databases have full-text articles, and sometimes we have the article available electronically, but it is not immediately available from the database with one click. If you do not see a PDF icon for the article within the database, you have 3 options -

Finding E-journals

Step 1: Identify specific articles of interest using the article database directions above.
Step 2:

Step 3: If the journal is not online, find the call number for the journal(s) in which the article is found. (Use the OSU Libraries Catalog for this step.) Find the article in the library and make a photocopy.

How to Read a Journal Article

The following websites give some tips on how to read scientific journal articles:

Reading a scientific article

How to Read a Journal Article 

My brief advice for reading journal articles is to keep a pen handy to write notes to yourself in the margins, and always write a summary of what you learned from the paper at the top of the paper or on a post-it note immediately after you finish reading the paper.

Writing and Research Assistance

The Writing Center - at OSU

Library Research Tutorial

Research and Documentation Online

 

A Writer's Reference


Scientific style and format : the CSE manual for authors, editors, and publishers / Style Manual Committee, Council of Science Editors. Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2006. 7th ed.
Valley Reference T11 .S386 2006

OWL Help for ESL Instructors and Students  - Resources for both ESL instructors and students

Working with Your Topic

Identify the main concepts within your topic.

 

Finding useful sources is highly dependent upon the words you choose to use in your searching.

Evaluate Your Sources

Citation Guides

Citation styles vary widely by journal.  Check the journal's website to see if they provide citation instructions under a section typically called "instructions for authors."  If you can't find this information on the website, use the references section of the journal article you want to model your references after as an example.   Pay particular attention to the order they place the information in, whether or not they use italics or bold, how they abbreviate journal titles, and how they use punctuation.

For some examples of some common citation styles preferred in the sciences see the CSE style guide or the APA style guide .

How to Tell if a Journal is Peer-Reviewed

If you are not sure that an article you would like to use as a reference for your project is from a peer-reviewed journal, you can