These are the best databases to start your search. If you have trouble finding what you need, you can try other databases from our database home page.
Remember that searching in a library database requires you to enter only concepts, not sentence like google. If you want more information on database searching skills check out the section below the databases on this page.
PsycARTICLES searches "over 50 top full-text psychology publications covering the disciplines of Human Physiology, Personality Psychology, Social Psychology, Educational Psychology, and more." The database includes all material from the print journals with the exception of advertisements and editorial board lists.
[Note: PsycINFO subscription canceled 2025 due to budget cuts. Subscription expires 6/30/2025] PsycINFO provides access to abstracts only of international literature in psychology and related disciplines, including psychiatry, education, business, medicine, nursing, pharmacology, law, linguistics, and social work.
Note: Our subscription will be changing from Academic Search Premier to Academic Search Elite January 2026
Provides searching of over 8,500 journals, including peer-reviewed, across a wide range of topics. coverage: 1975 to present
Note: JSTOR subscription will expand to the Full Access Model in January 2026
A full-text collection of more than 400 journals in business and the liberal arts, with especially strong coverage of business, finance, economics, history, regional studies, education, and sociology. (Our subscription includes the Arts & Sciences I, Arts & Sciences IV, Business I, and Business II collections.) JSTOR is notable for the high quality of the journals it includes. The most recent three to five years of each journal are usually excluded from JSTOR, however.
UNDERSTANDING SEARCH TERMS
Remember that searching in the databases is different than searching on Google. In Google you can search using a regular English sentence. "What is the connection between organic food and positive mental health?" But in library databases, you need to break down this sentence into individual concepts, and create search terms from the concepts. For example, we could search on the question about organic food and mental health with the search terms "Organic Food", "Mental Health" and "Study". The search terms "Study" means that we want to see any research on those connections.
It will also help your research to think about different ways that different authors might write about the same concept. Sometimes an author will use a synonym or similar word to discuss the same concept. A good way to help think through these search term options is to create a simple table like the one below.