JSTOR (www.jstor.org) is a not-for-profit organization with a dual mission to create and maintain a trusted archive of important scholarly journals, and to provide access to these journals as widely as possible. Content in JSTOR spans many disciplines, primarily in the humanities and social sciences. USF has access to the following collections: Arts & Sciences I - XV Collections, Business IV Collection, Ecology & Botany II Collection, Ireland Collection, Life Sciences Collection, and Sustainability Extension. For more information on these collection, please refer to https://about.jstor.org/librarians/journals/multi-discipline/. -- Simultaneous Users: Unlimited
The series Lecture Notes in Computer Science, and its sub series Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics, has established itself as one of most significant and fundamental publications recording new developments in computer science and information technology. Original research results reported in proceedings and post proceedings remain the core of Lecture notes in computer science. There are over 1000 volumes in this online collection. All volumes are published simultaneously in print and electronically. Selected print titles have also been added to online availability. Online access begins with 1997, but not all volumes are available. -- Simultaneous Users: Unlimited
ProQuest Dissertations and Theses: Global (PQDTGlobal) is the world's most comprehensive collection of full-text dissertations and theses. As the official digital dissertations archive for the Library of Congress and as the database of record for graduate research, PQDTGlobal includes millions of searchable citations to dissertations and theses together with over a million full-text dissertations that are available for download in PDF format. Over 2.1 million titles are available for purchase as printed copies. The database offers full text for most of the dissertations added since 1997 and strong retrospective full-text coverage for older graduate works, back to 1743. Simple bibliographic citations are available for dissertations dating from 1637. It also includes PQDT UK & Ireland content. More than 70,000 new full-text dissertations and theses are added to the database each year through dissertations publishing partnerships with 700 leading academic institutions worldwide, and collaborative retrospective digitization of dissertations. Full-text dissertations are archived as submitted by the degree-granting institution. Some will be native PDF, some PDF image. Each dissertation published since July, 1980 includes a 350-word abstract written by the author. Master's theses published since 1988 include 150-word abstracts. Where available, PQDTGlobal provides 24-page previews of dissertations and theses. Starting 2023, dissertations are also accessible through the ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Citation Index on the Web of Science platform. -- Simultaneous Users: Unlimited
SAGE Research Methods (SRM) is a research tool supported by a newly devised taxonomy that links content and methods terms. It provides the most comprehensive picture available today of research methods (quantitative, qualitative and mixed methods) across the social and behavioural sciences. It includes more than 100,000 pages of SAGE book and reference material on research methods as well as editorially selected material from SAGE journals. In addition, SRMO contains content from more than 800 books, including the complete Quantitative Applications in the Social Sciences "Little Green Books" series from SAGE.
Features journals, major reference works, online books, Current Protocols laboratory manuals, and databases as well as a suite of professional and management resources. -- USF Libraries access is based on purchase of or subscription to specific titles in the Wiley Online Library (WOL). Access to journal articles is generally back to 1997, with backfile access to selected titles. -- All content from Blackwell Synergy was merged into Wiley Online Library (formerly Wiley Interscience) at the end of June 2008.