After identifying the key concepts of your question, you can start to plan your keywords.
It is useful to brainstorm alternative terms for each of your key concepts.
When thinking about keywords, you can consider different terms such as synonyms, broader and narrower terms, related terms and spelling variations.
Using our key concepts from earlier, here is an example of a brainstorming table:
"How do campus green spaces affect the mental health of university students?"
| Concept: | Green spaces | Mental health | University students |
|---|---|---|---|
| Keywords: |
Green space(s) Gardens Landscape |
Mental health Wellbeing, Well-being Anxiety Stress |
University students College students Tertiary students |
Look at the titles and abstracts of a set of relevant articles you have found to get ideas for keywords.
Depending on your topic area, you may also add subject headings to your keywords table.
Now that you have some keywords, you can start:Building a search strategy