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You can search for a person as:
- An author, finding articles written by
that person
- A cited author, finding articles that
refer to the work of that person
- A subject, finding articles about that
person
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Note on Author Names: When performing a person search on
an author or cited author, your results may display a shortened
version of the last name. Regardless, enter the full last name
of the author when searching (if you know it); the Web of Science
search engine will automatically adjust for data variations. More
information on author names.
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Author Search
To search for articles by a specific person:
- Enter the author's full last name followed by a space and up to 3
initials (leave them out if you don't know them). See Author
Name Rules for more information.
- Click "Show me all the articles in the database that this person
has authored."
- Click Search.
Author Search Examples
- Enter CHANDLER to search for
articles by any author whose last name is Chandler.
- Enter CHANDLER N* to search
for articles by any author whose last name is Chandler, whose first
initial is N, and who may have other subsequent initials (the asterisk
stands for possible subsequent initials).
- Enter CHANDLER ND to search
for articles by any author whose last name is Chandler and whose only
initials are ND.
- Enter CHANDLER N* OR WILLIAMS C*
to search for articles by either author.
- Enter CHANDLER N* AND WILLIAMS C*
to search for jointly authored articles.
Beginning with 1998 data, non-alphanumeric characters (e.g., the apostrophe
in O'Brian or Paget's disease) and embedded spaces (e.g., the space
in the last name de la Rosa) are preserved in many fields in the database.
In order to search effectively across multiple years of data, you should
be sure to enter search strings that take account of all possible variations
of the data.
- Enter O'BRIAN C* OR OBRIAN C* to search
for articles authored by C. D. O'Brian.
- Enter PAGET'S DISEASE OR PAGETS DISEASE
to search for articles on Paget's disease.
- Enter DE LA ROSA W* OR DELAROSA W* to
search for articles authored by W. de la Rosa.
More search examples
Author Name Rules
- Use either upper, lower, or mixed case.
For example, enter STERLING, Sterling, or sterling.
- Use a space to separate the last name and initial(s)
For example, enter BARTHES R to
search for Roland Barthes.
- Leave the initials out if you don't know them.
For example, enter HAYDEN to search
for any author whose last name is Hayden.
- Use an asterisk after the first initial if you don't know the other
initials.
For example, enter KREEGER K*
to search for any author whose last name is Kreeger and whose first
name starts with K. Note that entering Kreeger K will search
for only those authors who have the single initial K.
- If the last name includes embedded spaces, enter the name both with
and without spaces, joining the two versions of the name with OR.
For example, enter DEVILLE * OR DE VILLE *
for De Ville.
- If the last name includes a nonalphanumeric character, enter the name
without the character.
For example, enter OBRIAN for
O'Brian.
- Join multiple names with the search
operators AND or OR according to what you want to retrieve.
- You may use wildcard characters
such as the question mark and asterisk to search for variants of words.
The question mark can be used to represent any single character.
The wildcard can be used to represent zero to many characters.
Cited Author Search
To search for articles that refer to the work of a specific person:
- Enter the author's last name followed by a space and up to 3 initials
(leave them out if you don't know them). Since authors are not always
cited using all of their initials, you may want to enter the first initial
followed by an asterisk, to retrieve all variants of the author's name.
See Cited Author Name Rules for more information.
- Click "Show me all the articles in the database that cite this
person's work."
- Click Search.
Cited Author Search Examples
- Enter CHANDLER to search for
any cited author whose last name is Chandler.
- Enter CHANDLER N to search for
any cited author whose last name is Chandler and whose only initial
is N.
- Enter CHANDLER ND to search
for any cited author whose last name is Chandler and whose only initials
are ND.
- Enter CHANDLER N* to search
for any cited author whose last name is Chandler, whose first initial
is N, and who may have other subsequent initials (the asterisk stands
for possible subsequent initials).
- Enter OBRIAN to search for any
cited author whose last name is O'Brian.
- Enter BROSNANMYERS to search
for any cited author whose last name is Brosnan-Myers.
- Enter DEVILLE * OR DE VILLE *
to search for any cited author whose last name is De Ville. Note that
the two versions of the name are joined by OR, one version with the
space and one without.
Cited Author Name Rules
- Use either upper, lower, or mixed case.
For example, enter STERLING, Sterling, or sterling.
- Use a space to separate the last name and initial(s)
For example, enter BARTHES R to
search for Roland Barthes as an author or cited author.
- Leave the initials out if you don't know them.
For example, enter HAYDEN to search
for any person whose last name is Hayden.
- Use an asterisk after the first initial if you don't know the other
initials.
For example, enter KREEGER K*
to search for any person whose last name is Kreeger and whose first
name starts with K. Note that entering Kreeger K will search
for only those people who have the single initial K.
- If the last name is longer than fifteen characters, enter the first
fifteen characters followed by an asterisk to represent the remaining
characters.
- If the last name includes embedded spaces, enter the name both with
and without spaces, joining the two versions of the name with OR.
For example, enter DEVILLE * OR DE VILLE *
for De Ville.
- If the last name includes a nonalphanumeric character, enter the name
without the character.
For example, enter OBRIAN for
O'Brian.
- Join multiple names with the search
operators AND or OR according to what you want to retrieve.
- You may use wildcard characters
such as the question mark and asterisk to search for variants of words.
The question mark can be used to represent any single character.
The wildcard can be used to represent zero to many characters.
Person as Subject Search
To search for articles about a specific person:
- Enter the last name only when the name is sufficiently unique (e.g.,
CHAUCER). If you need to enter a first name, see Subject
Search Rules.
- Click "Show me articles that are about this person."
- Click Search.
Person as Subject Search Examples
- Enter DICKENS to search for
articles about Charles Dickens.
- Enter BULWER LYTTON OR BULWERLYTTON
to search for articles about William Bulwer Lytton.
- Enter OCASEY OR O CASEY to search
for articles about Sean O'Casey.
- Enter BRONTE EMILY OR EMILY BRONTE
to search for articles about Emily Bronte.
- Enter BROWNING ROBERT OR ROBERT BROWNING
to search for articles about Robert Browning.
Person as Subject Search Rules
- Use either upper, lower, or mixed case.
For example, enter STERLING, Sterling, or sterling.
- Enter only the last name, if the name is sufficiently unique.
For example, entering THACKERAY
is sufficient to search for articles about William Thackeray.
- When searching for articles about a person, you must enter at least
three characters before a wildcard.
For example, enter ANDREW JOH* to search
for articles about Andrew Johnson.
- If you need to include a first name, enter the name in both first
last and last first format.
For example, enter BROWN CHARLES BROCKDEN OR CHARLES
BROCKDEN BROWN to search for articles about Charles
Brockden Brown.
- If the last name includes embedded spaces, enter the name both with
and without the space. Join the two versions of the name with OR.
For example, enter DELAMARE OR DE LA MARE
to search for articles about Walter de la Mare.
- If the last name includes a nonalphanumeric character, enter the name
both without the character and with the character replaced by a space.
Join the two versions of the name with OR.
For example, enter OCASEY OR O CASEY
for O'Casey.
- Join multiple names with the search
operators AND or OR according to what you want to retrieve.
- You may use wildcard characters
such as the question mark and asterisk to search for variants of words.
The question mark can be used to represent any single character.
The wildcard can be used to represent zero to many characters. When
searching for a person as a subject, you must have at least 3 characters
before the asterisk wildcard character.
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