Library Hours
Mon-Thur: 9 am to 8 pm
Friday: 9 am to 5 pm
Saturday: 2 to 5 pm
Sunday: 2 to 5 pm
FALL BREAK:
Mon-Wed 9 am to 5 pm
You can use the information that you already have (author(s), title, etc) to find the entire
paper if it indeed exists in print. Do keep in mind that not all conferences and abstracts are
published.
We reccommend using either
MathSciNet or
Zentralblatt Math to locate
completed papers. If you search by the author's name in these databases, you may want to
truncate the name as follows: Lastname, F* --- this will retrieve all records with the author's
last name and first initial, or simply search by last name. Either of these variations on the name
may be how the author is listed in the database. If the article has more than one author, you may
search using just one of the names.
Once you have the source (the journal or book in which the paper is published), you can
search in
I-Share
Online Catalog. Be sure to search for the entire book or journal rather than title of the
specific paper for which you are looking.In addition to the print materials that the Mathematics
Library subscribes to, do not forget about the
Electronic Journals
available online. If the source citation looks strange, it may be an abbreviation of the full name.
You can search abbreviated names, for the full titles at this
MathSciNet page.
If you are unable to locate the paper through any of these means, consider searching the
author's name, in the above databases, to see if he or she has published a different paper on a
similar topic. Such a paper may contain comparable information that may be useful to you.
If you are unable to find the paper or a related paper through these means, please contact a
librarian or staff member in the Mathematics Library and we will do all we can to help you find
it.