In this tutorial, we'll take a look at some of the features of CINAHL's search result display. I am going to show you how to save, print, e-mail your search results, and how to find full-text of the articles you want. So again, this is the search we did in the last few tutorials, and we came up with a final set of articles that we want to further explore in detail. Down here, below the search history table, is the search result display area, and by default, the results for the last executed search will be displayed in this area. If you want to show the results from a different set, you can click on the 'View Results' link for that specific set. We talked about the quick limit option column in the previous tutorial. These are the search results themselves. Since we only have five results, all of them are displayed on the same page. But if you have a lot of results, they will be paginated. I can change the sorting setting using this drop-down menu here. I can view the abstract of an article by simply by mousing over the little magnifying glass icons in each of these references. This will bring up a pop-up box with more information on this article, and the abstract will show up in there, if it is available. Now you may be wondering, okay, these are just abstracts, and bibliographic information— where do I find the full text of these articles? Well, that's what these "Yale Links" buttons are for. Yale Links is a full-text direct linking service provided by the Yale University Library. What it does is that it links database records for articles, such as these, to Yale Library's online, full-text subscriptions. So let's say we want the full text of this particular article. I'm just going to click on the Yale Links button, and the Yale Links service menu will come up in a pop-up window, or a new tab of your browser, So I can see here the the Yale Library subscribes to the full-text of this article, from this full-text vendor. I can just click on the 'GO' button to view and download the full text from the vendor's website. By the way, Yale Links also has other very useful functionalities, such as running automatic catalogue searches to look for print copies of the article, sending Interlibrary Loan requests for the article, et cetera. You may want to check out my tutorials on Yale Links for more details. Okay, let's go back to the Search Results display. Let me show you some other functions here you may find useful. Let's say you want to save these search results for future reference. Now there is a difference between saving the search results, and saving the search strategy. We're going to be talking about how to save search strategy to allow automatic rerun of a search in a later tutorial. Today I'm going to show you how to save search results. In CINAHL, this is called 'Add to folder'. You can see that each one of these references has an 'Add to folder' link, with a folder icon. You can click on the link, and then this reference is put into the default folder. How do I know that? Well, first of all, you can see that the link becomes 'Remove from folder', and the icon becomes an open folder, with documents. Meanwhile, on the right-hand side of the page, the 'Folder has items' section shows up, and it lists what's currently in the folder. And this is the item I just added. So I can do this for every one of these. You can see it's pretty easy to do. If you want to put all of the results on this page to your folder, you can click on this link here, and you can put all of them in your folder in one click. So what does the folder look like? You can click on the 'Folder View' link here, or go up to the top and click on 'Folder'. So here are my folders. By default, the articles I chose to put in to the folder will end up in the 'Articles' folder. Notice that if you're not logged into the My EBSCOHost account, your folders and their contents are temporary. But if you're logged in, your folders are permanently saved, and can be retrieved in the future. If you are logged in, you can also see the 'My Custom' folders. All folders created by you will be here. So let me create a custom folder. Click on 'New'... give it a name... add some notes if you want... ...and click 'Save'. If I want, I can copy and move the references I just saved to the custom folder I've created. The folder view also allows you to print, email, save, and export the references in the folders. That's what these four icons are for. I can first select the references I want, or I can select all references in this folder by checking here. To print, I just click on the printer icon. I can choose from the printing options here... I will take the default for this demo... I can choose to remove items from the folder after printing... I'm not going to do that here... ...and then I can click 'Print'. Going back... To e-mail... I can just click on the mail icon... I have some similar options regarding the format. I can fill out the e-mail information. Once I'm done, I can click on 'Send'. Going back... To save the references to a separate file, I can click on the disc icon. Again, I have some similar format options here... I can chose to include HTML links to articles in the saved file. Once I'm done, I can simply click on 'Save'. Going back... While saving, e-mailing, and printing search results can be useful in their own ways, I would highly recommend that you export your search results to citation management applications, such as EndNone or RefWorks, for easier manipulation of these references in the future. In the next two tutorials, I am going to show you how to export your search results out of CINAHL to RefWorks and EndNote. I'll see you next time.