ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global
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- ProQuest ETD Administrator -Electronic Submissions ProQuest has been providing delivery of dissertations and theses electronically since 2003. We have developed over 400 submission sites for institutions and expect to have a total of 500 completed by the end of 2012. The ProQuest ETD Administrator is currently the most widely used submission tool.
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With more than 5 million dissertations and theses , ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global is the most comprehensive collection of dissertations and theses in the world. PQDT Global connects scholarship from 4,100 universities, diverse voices, ideas, and perspectives can be viewed within a singular global context.
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global is the official dissertations repository for the Library of Congress. It includes access to international scholarly works from USA, UK to Continental Europe, Africa to India and China. Our partnerships with universities have been key to expanding the reach and impact of graduate works. By working together, the visibility of both the institution and its PhD dissertation production are enhanced in the worldwide research community. In 2017, ProQuest joined forces with China Academic Library and Information System (CALIS) to provide first-ever global access to abstracts of the graduate output of 80 Chinese Universities.
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global is updated weekly and features 24 indexed and searchable fields, including full text searchability for the entire text of full-text dissertations. Around, 200,000 dissertation works added annually.
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global allows students, faculties, and research scholars:
- To Check the Uniqueness of Dissertations Titles : T o find titles related to their scholarly interests and to make sure that their proposed thesis or dissertation topics have not already been written about
- Global Network of Knowledge: PQDT Global connects scholarship from 4,100 universities globally, diverse voices, ideas, and perspectives. PQDT Global database gives instant access to high-quality, multidisciplinary research materials to Uncover new ideas and innovations with more confidence and effectiveness.
- Equitable Search Results: A dedicated ProQuest editorial team reviews every title and applies enhancements to create equitable discoverability across subjects and institutions, consistently delivering quality, relevant results
- Connections to Insights: Each full text dissertation in PQDT Global is fully searchable providing an unparalleled resource for text and data mining analysis making connections that generate new insights.
- The Undiscovered: PQDT Global helps the students and research scholars to uncover the “undiscovered research” insight and intelligence which is often overlooked because the majority of scholarly research is never formally published into books and articles. Rich with new and niche information on every topic imaginable, dissertations are a wealth of potential insights for all levels of researchers.
- Citations Connection - Citation Connections deliver Foundational Research and Similar Dissertations documents. User can extract Dissertation citations which are cross-linked, searchable, and offering a “ready-made” list of sources on a topic .
- ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Global with the Web of Science™ - The integration of ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Global with the Web of Science™ enab les researchers to seamlessly uncover early career, post-graduate research in the form of more than 5.8 million dissertations and theses from over 4,100 institutions from more than 65 countries, alongside journal articles, conference proceedings, research data, books, preprints and patents.
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ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global indexes dissertations and masters' theses from most North American graduate schools as well as some European universities.
It provides full text for most indexed dissertations from 1990 to present.
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Available Formats
Electronic copies.
As of September 2010 all doctoral dissertations and masters theses are submitted to the Proquest Dissertations & Theses database. Electronic copies of doctoral dissertations began to be available in 1997 while masters theses began to be available in September 2010. After a dissertation or thesis is submitted to Graduate Studies, it can take up to several months for it to appear in the database.
As of Spring Quarter 2021, theses and dissertations are also submitted to eScholarship .
Paper Copies
Masters theses from mid-2003 to September 2010 are located in the Shields Library book stacks.
Microfiche Copies
UC Davis theses and dissertations issued between 1978 and mid-2003 are available for use in the Microcopy Collection, Lower Level, Shields Library. Microfiche copies are available for inter-library loan and for reading, copying, or scanning within the library.
Archival Copies
UC Davis theses and dissertations issued before 1978 are typically only available in Special Collections. These are stored offsite and are for use only in the Blanchard Special Collections Reading Room. They can be requested at aeon.library.ucdavis.edu . Turnaround time is 48-72 hours.
Locating Dissertations and Theses
Via uc library search.
UC Davis dissertations and theses can be located via the library’s online catalog, UC Library Search . The item record will indicate the location of each thesis and dissertation.
Search Tips
Dissertations and theses do not receive standard “subject” headings. Dissertation titles are required to be descriptive, so title word searches are often effective. Another strategy, applicable for dissertations only, is to search in Proquest’s Dissertations & Theses Database (limiting to UC Davis if desired), where one can search titles, abstracts, and subject descriptors.
Note: with our new catalog options, searching by dissertation subject heading is less used, but in case you need to know, UC Davis catalogs its theses and dissertations with a limited subject heading, constructed of the phrase Dissertations, Academic — University of California, Davis plus the name of the department in which the degree is granted, for example:
- Dissertations, Academic — University of California, Davis — Genetics
For 1989 and earlier, use the heading Dissertations, Academic — California plus the name of the department in which the degree is granted, for example:
- Dissertations, Academic — California — Soil science
Via the Dissertations & Theses Database
The Dissertations & Theses Database via Proquest includes citations for theses and dissertations from 1861 to the current year. Entries for dissertations from 1980 forward include 350-word abstracts, written by the author. Citations for master’s theses from 1988 forward include 150-word abstracts. UC Davis submits only doctoral dissertations for inclusion in Dissertations & Theses via Proquest.
Search Dissertations & Theses by:
- The keyword of the title or abstract
- School (“Davis,” for example)
- Advisor name
- Other fields
Some UC Davis dissertations are not sent to ProQuest at the request of the author. In such cases, locate the bibliographic record in the UC Library Search online catalog. There may be a microform or print copy available for use, or you may request retrieval of the archival copy via Special Collections.
The Dissertations & Theses database provides access to the complete full-text of all University of California dissertations in addition to UC Davis doctoral dissertations from the year 1997 forward. Free 24-page previews are available for most other university theses and dissertations listed in the database from 1997 forward. Access to the ProQuest database and full-text is limited to UC computer addresses.
How to Obtain PDFs from the Dissertations & Theses Database
When displaying a citation for a dissertation, the Digital Dissertations database will indicate via a “Full text -PDF” button that the dissertation is available for full-text download. Nearly all of the UC dissertations since 1997 are available in full-text format.
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ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global. ProQuest. Contact publisher for pricing.
URL: https://about.proquest.com/en/products-services/pqdtglobal
Containing over 5 million citations and 2.7 million full-text works, "ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global (PQDT) is the world's largest multidisciplinary database for electronic theses and dissertations," wrote Alissa Droog for ccAdvisor. It will be most useful for graduate students looking for sample dissertations and theses or researchers searching for the most recent research on a particular topic. Droog noted that the "theses and dissertations are sourced from over 3,100 institutions and...
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ProQuest dissertations & theses global
Provides online access to over 3.8 million dissertations and master's theses with 1.7 million available in full text for immediate downloading. Citations are available for dissertations dating from 1861 and full text online from 1997 for over 1,000 schools submitting to the ProQuest UMI database.
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global
Comprehensive collection of dissertations and theses from around the world, including millions of works from thousands of universities. 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. Simple bibliographic citations are available for dissertations dating from 1637.
Includes the following:
- ProQuest Dissertations & Theses: UK & Ireland
- ProQuest Dissertations & Theses: A & I
- ProQuest Dissertations & Theses: CIC Institutions
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Theses and Dissertations
Cornell theses.
Check Cornell’s library catalog , which lists the dissertations available in our library collection.
The print thesis collection in Uris Library is currently shelved on Level 3B before the Q to QA regular-sized volumes. Check with the library staff for the thesis shelving locations in other libraries (Mann, Catherwood, Fine Arts, etc.).
Non-Cornell Theses
Proquest dissertations and theses.
According to ProQuest, coverage begins with 1637. With more than 2.4 million entries, ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Global is the starting point for finding citations to doctoral dissertations and master’s theses. Dissertations published from 1980 forward include 350-word abstracts written by the author. Master’s theses published from 1988 forward include 150-word abstracts. UMI also offers over 1.8 million titles for purchase in microfilm or paper formats. The full text of more than 930,000 are available in PDF format for immediate free download. Use Interlibrary Loan for the titles not available as full text online.
Foreign Dissertations at the Center for Research Libraries
To search for titles and verify holdings of dissertations at the Center for Research Libraries (CRL), use the CRL catalog . CRL seeks to provide comprehensive access to doctoral dissertations submitted to institutions outside the U. S. and Canada (currently more than 750,000 titles). One hundred European universities maintain exchange or deposit agreements with CRL. Russian dissertation abstracts in the social sciences are obtained on microfiche from INION. More detailed information about CRL’s dissertation holdings .
Additional Resources
Please see our resource guide on dissertations and theses for additional resources and support.
Princeton University Library
Phd dissertation and master's thesis submission guidelines.
The Princeton University Archives at the Mudd Manuscript Library is the repository for Ph.D. dissertations and Master’s theses. The Princeton University Archives partners with ProQuest to publish and distribute Princeton University dissertations beyond the campus community.
Below you will find instructions on the submission process and the formatting requirements for your Ph.D. dissertation or Master's thesis. If you have questions about this process, please use our Ask Us form or visit the Mudd Manuscript Library during our open hours.
Ph.D Dissertation Submission Process
The first step is for the student to prepare their dissertation according to the Dissertation Formatting Requirements . Near the time of the final public oral examination (FPO) (shortly before or immediately after) the student must complete the online submission of their dissertation via the ProQuest UMI ETD Administrator website . Students are required to upload a PDF of their dissertation, choose publishing options, enter subject categories and keywords, and make payment to ProQuest (if fees apply). This step will take roughly 20-25 minutes.
After the FPO the student should log on to TigerHub and complete the checkout process. When this step is complete, Mudd Library will be notified for processing. This step will occur M-F during business hours. The Mudd Library staff member will review, apply the embargo (when applicable), and approve the dissertation submission in ProQuest. You will receive an email notification of the approval from ProQuest when it has been approved or needs revisions.
The vast majority of students will not be required to submit a bound copy of their dissertation to the library. Only students who have removed content from the PDF to avoid copyright infringement are required to submit a bound copy to the library. This unredacted, bound version of the dissertation must be formatted according to the Dissertation Formatting Requirements , and delivered by hand, mail, or delivery service to the Mudd Manuscript Library by the degree date deadline in order to be placed on the degree list. Address the bound copy to: Attn: Dissertations, Mudd Manuscript Library, 65 Olden Street, Princeton, NJ 08540.
ProQuest Publishing Options
When you submit your dissertation to the ProQuest ETD Administrator site, you will be given two options: Traditional Publishing or Open Access Publishing Plus. ProQuest compares the two options in their Open Access Overview document . Full details will be presented in the ProQuest ETD Administrator site.
Traditional Publishing
No fee is paid to ProQuest; your dissertation will be available in full text to subscribing institutions only through the ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global ; If you have an embargo, your dissertation will be unavailable for viewing or purchase through the subscription database during the embargo period.
Open Access Publishing Plus
$95 fee to ProQuest; your dissertation will be available in full text through the Internet to anyone via the ProQuest Database ; if you have an embargo, your dissertation will be unavailable for viewing through the open access database during the embargo period.
Optional Service: Copyright Registration
$75 fee to ProQuest; ProQuest offers the optional service of registering your copyright on your behalf. The dissertation author owns the copyright to their dissertation regardless of copyright registration. Registering your copyright makes a public record of your copyright claim and may entitle you to additional compensation should your copyright be infringed upon. For a full discussion of your dissertation and copyright, see ProQuest’s Copyright and Your Dissertation .
If you have questions regarding the ProQuest publishing options, contact their Author and School Relations team at 1-800-521-0600 ext. 77020 or via email at [email protected] .
Princeton’s Institutional Repository, DataSpace
Each Princeton University dissertation is deposited in Princeton’s Institutional Repository, DataSpace . Dissertations will be freely available on the Internet except during an embargo period. If your dissertation is embargoed, the PDF will be completely restricted during the embargo period. The bound copy, however, will be available for viewing in the Mudd Manuscript Library reading room during the embargo.
According to the Graduate School’s embargo policy , students can request up to a two-year embargo on their dissertation, with the potential for renewal by petition. If approved, the embargo would apply to the dissertation in ProQuest, as well as in Princeton’s digital repository, DataSpace . Students in the sciences and engineering seeking patents or pursuing journal articles may be approved for a shorter embargo period. Students must apply for the embargo during the Advanced Degree Application process . More information can be found on the Graduate School's Ph.D. Publication, Access and Embargoing webpage .
Those who have been approved for the embargo can choose "Traditional Publishing" or "Open Access Plus" publishing when they complete their online submission to ProQuest. Mudd Manuscript Library staff will apply the embargo in the ProQuest ETD system at the time of submission of materials to the Library. In the case of Open Access Plus, the dissertation would become freely available on the ProQuest open access site when the embargo expires. The embargo in ProQuest will also apply to the embargo in Princeton’s digital repository, DataSpace
Those who wish to request a renewal of an existing embargo must email Assistant Dean Geoffrey Hill and provide the reason for the extension. An embargo renewal must be requested in writing at least one month before the original embargo has expired, but may not be requested more than three months prior to the embargo expiration date. Embargoes cannot be reinstituted after having expired. Embargoes are set to expire two years from the date on which the Ph.D. was awarded (degrees are awarded five times per year at Board of Trustee meetings); this date will coincide with the degree date (month and year) on the title page of your dissertation. Please note: You, the student, are responsible for keeping track of the embargo period--notifications will not be sent.
- To find the exact date of an embargo expiration, individuals can find their dissertation in DataSpace , and view the box at the bottom of the record, which will indicate the embargo expiration date.
- The Graduate School will inform the Mudd Library of all renewals and Mudd Library staff will institute the extensions in ProQuest and DataSpace .
- Princeton University Archives' Dissertation Formatting Requirements (PDF download) document provides detailed information on how to prepare the dissertation PDF and bound volume (if you are required to submit a bound volume). Please take special note of how to format the title page (a title page example is downloadable from the upper-right-hand side of this webpage). The title page must list your adviser’s name.
- ProQuest's Preparing Your Manuscript guide offers additional information on formatting the PDF. Where there are discrepancies with the Princeton University Archives Dissertation Formatting Requirements document, the Princeton University Archives requirements should be followed. Special consideration should be paid to embedding fonts in the PDF.
- ProQuest ETD Administrator Resources and Guidelines web page offers several guides to assist you in preparing your PDF, choosing publishing options, learning about copyright considerations, and more.
- ProQuest's Support and Training Department can assist with issues related to creating and uploading PDFs and any questions regarding technical issues with the online submission site.
Whether a student pays fees to ProQuest in the ETD Administrator Site depends on the publishing option they choose, and if they opt to register their copyright (if a student selects Traditional Publishing, and does not register their copyright, no charges are incurred). Fees are to be submitted via the UMI ETD Administrator Site. Publishing and copyright registration fees are payable by Visa, MasterCard, or American Express and a small service tax may be added to the total. The options listed below will be fully explained in the ETD Administrator site.
- Traditional without copyright registration: $0 to ProQuest (online)
- Traditional with copyright registration: $75 to ProQuest (online)
- Open Access without copyright registration: $95 to ProQuest (online)
- Open Access ($95) with copyright registration ($55): $150 to ProQuest (online)
Degrees are granted five times per year at Board of Trustee meetings. Deadlines for materials to be submitted to the Mudd Manuscript Library are set by the Office of the Graduate School . The title page of your dissertation must state the month and year of the board meeting at which you will be granted your degree, for example “April 2023.”
Academic Year 2024-2025
- Friday, August 30, 2024, degree date "September 2024"
- Thursday, October 31, 2024, degree date "November 2024"
- Tuesday, December 31, 2024, degree date "January 2025"
- Friday, February 28, 2025, degree date "March 2025"
- Thursday, May 8, 2025, degree date "May 2025"
Please note: If a student is granted an extension for submission of their materials after a deadline has passed, the Mudd Manuscript Library must have written confirmation of the extension from the Office of the Graduate School in the form of an email to [email protected] .
One non-circulating , bound copy of each dissertation produced until and including the January 2022 degree list is held in the collection of the University Archives. For dissertations submitted prior to September 2011, a circulating , bound copy of each dissertation may also be available. Information about these dissertations can be found in Princeton University Library's catalog .
Electronic Copy (PDF) in ProQuest
ProQuest Dissertation Publishing distributes Princeton University dissertations. Members of the Princeton University community can access most dissertations through the ProQuest Dissertations and Theses subscription database, which is made available through the Princeton University Library. For students that choose "Open Access Plus publishing," their dissertations are available freely on the internet via ProQuest Dissertations and Theses . Dissertations are available for purchase through ProQuest Dissertation Express . Once the dissertation has been accepted by the Mudd Library it will be released to ProQuest following the Board of Trustee meeting on which your degree is conferred. Bound copies ordered from ProQuest will be printed following release. Please note, dissertations under embargo are not available in full text through the ProQuest Dissertations and Theses subscription database or for sale via ProQuest Dissertation Express during the embargo period.
Electronic Copy (PDF) in Princeton's Institutional Repository, DataSpace
Beginning in the fall of 2011, dissertations will be available through the internet in full-text via Princeton's digital repository, DataSpace . (Embargoed dissertations become available to the world once the embargo expires.)
Interlibrary Loan
Dissertations that have bound copies and are not under embargo are available through Interlibrary Loan (ILL) to libraries in the United States and Canada, either through hard copy or PDF. If PDFs are available, they can be sent internationally.
Master's Thesis Submission Process
Students who are enrolled in a thesis-based Master’s degree program must upload a PDF of their thesis to Princeton's ETD Administrator site (ProQuest) just prior to completing the final paperwork for the Graduate School. These programs currently include:
- The Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering (M.S.E.)
- The Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering (M.S.E.)
- The Department of Computer Science (M.S.E.)
- The Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (M.S.E.)
- The Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering (M.S.E.)
- The Department of Operations Research and Financial Engineering (M.S.E.)
- The Department of Near Eastern Studies (M.A.)
The PDF should be formatted according to our Dissertation Formatting Requirements (PDF download). The Mudd Library will review and approve the submission upon notification from the Graduate School that your final paperwork is ready for this step. Bound copies are no longer required or accepted for Master's theses.
Students who are not in a thesis-based Master's degree program do not need to make a submission to the library upon graduation. If you have questions, please complete the form on the Ask Special Collections page.
- Dissertation Formatting Requirements
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Open Access at Yale
Yale University Library supports many open access initiatives through membership fees. These include preprint servers like the arXiv and medRxiv, Knowledge Unlatched, the Biodiversity Heritage Library, Reveal Digital, the Technical Report Archive & Image Library, and the Sponsoring Consortium for Open Access Publishing in Particle Physics. Read more about our open access initiative support here.
Are you about to publish? Yale Library has agreements with some publishers that provide discounts when you publish with them. For PLOS and Cambridge University Press, the article processing charges to publish open access are completely waived. To learn more about your options and the details of our agreements, visit the library's guide to open access publishing support.
Guidelines on what the library supports and our strategy for choosing initiatives are available here.
Some of our databases have filters that allow you to see what is being published open access, including the Web of Science and Scopus. If you want to see what Yale authors have published under open access licenses, for example, do a search on Yale University using the Institution/Affiliation filter, then narrow down to open access in the results.
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- Let's Find Dissertations
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For Graduate Students: When you start in a science program at Yale, you will often be called upon by your adviser to look up dissertations from past members of your lab or specific individuals in your field, and later on, you will look to these same dissertations when you have questions about how to construct your research narrative and format it. This tab will show you some of the options you have for locating dissertations. At the bottom of the tab, there is a list of al of the places where you may find dissertations.
The primary digital database for dissertations is called ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Global . There are two ways to access that:
- On the ProQuest platform
- Via the Web of Science's Dissertations and Theses Collection
On both platforms, you have the opportunity to do an advanced search. Useful fields to search include Adviser and Institution. Below is an example of a search on the Web of Science platform while you are in the Dissertations & Theses collection.
Quicksearch, the library's discovery tool, will display dissertations among the item types available when you search on the main library website. This is actually searching the Dissertations filter in our Articles+ interface, which shows what we have in (roughly) 80% of our licensed digital products. Most of the dissertation search results are also from ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Global.
Below is the promised list of dissertation sources that you are welcome to look at.
- CRL Center for Research Libraries Foreign Doctoral Dissertations Holds 800,000 dissertations from universities outside the U.S. and Canada. However, only 20,000 of these are cataloged in the database. If you know the exact title of a dissertation and do not find it in the database, CRL recommends searching the CRL Catalog. If the title does not appear in the database or the catalog, contact CRL directly to inquire if it is held. CRL continues to acquire about 5,000 titles per year from major universities.
- Index to Theses ... Accepted for Higher Degrees by the Universities of Great Britain and Ireland The Index to Theses provides total bibliographic control of all theses ever produced by British and Irish universities (1716 to the present). Access is by author, title, university, degree, year, and keyword. Abstracts are included for titles written since 1970. Full text is not provided, but copies of the dissertations may be requested through interlibrary loan.
- ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Global ProQuest Dissertations and Theses: Global (PQDTGlobal) is the world's most comprehensive collection of full-text dissertations and theses. PQDTGlobal includes millions of searchable citations to dissertations and theses from 1861 to the present day together with over a million full-text dissertations that are available for download in PDF format, including most of the dissertations added since 1997 and strong retrospective full-text coverage for older graduate works. It also includes PQDT UK & Ireland content. Access is limited to Yale University
- Vidyanidhi: Digital Library and E-Scholarship Portal (from India)
In Quicksearch , you can search for general topics and narrow down to specific subjects using the facets to the left of your search results. This can limit resources to specific date ranges, languages, locations, online/offline, dissertations, and so on. Searching for " The Vegetation of Antarctica through Geological time" (note: capitalization isn't meaningful) with quotation marks because it's a specific book title on library.yale.edu will push you to a generic landing page where you can pathfind your way to what you want. I've circled the things in the screenshot below that will take you through to the catalog. As in the screenshot below, there is sometimes some generosity if you don't completely mimic the book title.
Please note that Books+ and Books are different, though. Books+ takes you to everything in the catalog (the + sign is doing a lot of work here!), but Books will take you to the catalog with the content type filter set to Books .
On a record, you can also click on the subject terms assigned to a book relevant to your research. This will help you with digital serendipity by calling up books from across YUL that have those same subject tags.
Clicking on the subject terms will show you the subject terms in the hierarchy as shown. If we want to see what is about these subjects in general , regardless of where something like "Devonian" may appear, we can search for the subject term Devonian as a subject term using the subject search in either the main search box (using the drop-down menu) or in the advanced search.
In the old search interface, Orbis , you have a really interesting option that might be helpful to you. Library of Congress call numbers, which appear in either the catalog record or on the print spine (e.g., QK980 C35X 2012), can be searched. These call numbers are based on book topics, and you can locate other materials related to the book of interest to you with this search feature.
While a lot of papers appear in Google Scholar, the Web of Science (Clarivate Analytics) is the best place to go if you want to:
- Analyze articles' citation performance by author.
- View the research performance of a department (usually best done by searching on addresses + institutions).
- Discover which papers are associated with a particular grant.
- View a two-way citation tree — or, papers cited by a paper plus papers citing a paper.
If you want metrics about social impact, Scopus is actually better — if an article has been shared frequently on social media, Scopus will have a page devoted to that. It also disambiguates authors via its author search (but for common names, it can get difficult and inaccurate).
- This is an example of the Metrics (including social media mentions) page for a recently-published article, "On the history, osteology, and systematic position of the Wealden (Hastings group) dinosaur Hypselospinus fittoni (Iguanodontia: Styracosterna)." (2015). Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 173 (1), pp. 92-189 .
- Here's O.C. Marsh's author page (the primary one). You can also click View potential author matches to locate his name/affiliation variants to merge with this view. This is a very helpful feature for those working in interdisciplinary contexts.
The Journal Citation Reports (by Clarivate Analytics) will help you determine the performance of your journal articles — and find places where you can submit new papers. Disciplines are often one of the categories. (If this tells you we don't have access, just refresh the page.)
What is ORCID?
ORCID provides you with a unique identifier — an O pen R esearcher and C ontributor ID — and a mechanism for linking your research outputs and activities to your ORCID. Yale is an ORCID member.
How is it useful to me?
ORCID is integrated into many systems used by publishers, funders, institutions, and other research-related services. Some publishers now require an ORCID for the primary (or all) co-authors when submitting a paper.
An ORCID …
- Distinguishes you and ensures your research outputs/activities are correctly attributed to you.
- Reliably and easily connects you with your contributions and affiliations, including employment, funding, scholarly works, and education.
- Reduces form-filling — again, many publishers, funders, and research-related services now have ORCID sign-ins and integrations.
- Improves recognition and discoverability for you and your research outputs.
- Is sometimes required by journal manuscript submission systems and grant application forms.
- Is persistent — you can use it throughout your research career.
In addition, if you have a common name or plan to change your name in the future, ORCID can help others find your older papers.
Watch Why ORCID? to learn more: https://vimeo.com/237730655
How do I register?
Go to https://orcid.org/signin . Click Institutional Account and type in Yale University. From here, you can log in with your Yale credentials. If you don’t already have an account, ORCID will guide you through the three-minute account creation process.
Where can I learn more?
Learn more about ORCID at https://orcid.org/help or in the Yale Library ORCID guide at https://guides.library.yale.edu/orcid
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The National Center for Faculty Development and Diversity (NCFDD) Dissertation Success Curriculum is designed to provide the skills, strategies, and support that advanced graduate students need to overcome the three biggest obstacles to finishing their dissertation: perfectionism, procrastination, and isolation. The program is built on the assumption that there is only one way to complete a dissertation: WRITE IT!
For more information, create a FREE (through UC) NCFDD account and view the Dissertation Success Curriculum webpage.
Utilize ProQuest to read other dissertations or theses from your school or field to help guide your process.
To view submitted theses and dissertations, visit ProQuest .
Resources for Dissertators lists helpful books and chapters that can inform your writing process and links to guides for thesis and dissertations, grant writing support, and more.
To view these dissertation resources, visit the The University of Wisconsin - Madison Writing Center website.
Joan Bolker, Writing Your Dissertation in Fifteen Minutes a Day. Available for loan through DAAP’s library .
Scott Rank, How to Finish Your Dissertation in Six Months, Even if You Don’t Know What to Write .
Paul J. Silvia, How to Write a Lot: A Practical Guide to Productive Academic Writing . Available for loan through Langsam Library .
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Top Dissertations Archives - May 2021
View the top 25 Most-Accessed Dissertations and Theses across all subjects, based upon total PDF downloads for April 2021.
Top Dissertations Archives - April 2021
Top dissertations archives - march 2021.
View the top 25 Most-Accessed Dissertations and Theses across all subjects, based upon total PDF downloads for March 2021.
Top Dissertations Archives - February 2021
View the top 25 Most-Accessed Dissertations and Theses across all subjects, based upon total PDF downloads for February 2021.
Top Dissertations Archives - January 2021
View the top 25 Most-Accessed Dissertations and Theses across all subjects, based upon total PDF downloads for January 2021.
Top Dissertation Archives - December 2020
View the top 25 Most-Accessed Dissertations and Theses across all subjects, based upon total PDF downloads for December 2020.
Top Dissertations Archives - November 2020
View the top 25 Most-Accessed Dissertations and Theses across all subjects, based upon total PDF downloads for November 2020.
Top Dissertations Archives - October 2020
View the top 25 Most-Accessed Dissertations and Theses across all subjects, based upon total PDF downloads for October 2020.
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Over the last 80 years, ProQuest has built the world's most comprehensive and renowned dissertations program. ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global (PQDT Global), continues to grow its repository of 5 million graduate works each year, thanks to the continued contribution from the world's universities, creating an ever-growing resource of emerging research to fuel innovation and new insights.
The ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global (PQDT) ™ database is the world's most comprehensive curated collection of multi-disciplinary dissertations and theses from around the world, offering over 5 million citations and 3 million full-text works from thousands of universities. Within dissertations and theses is a wealth of scholarship, yet ...
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global is a wealth of unique global scholarship, which is a credible and quality source to Uncover the Undiscovered research insights and intelligence in easiest and most effective ways. The equitable discoverability of more than 5.8 million dissertations and theses with coverage from year 1637, allows ...
ProQuest - Dissertations
ProQuest Dissertations Express. Help ; Pricing ; Cart ; Author Discount. See Pricing in the menu for more ... Key terms. Use field-specific terms or even generic phrases . Publication number. Also called order number or dissertation/thesis number. Search. Get your copy of a dissertation or thesis . Start your search by providing one or more of ...
ProQuest Dissertation & Theses Global is the world's most comprehensive curated collection of multi-disciplinary dissertations and theses from around the world. Read more TDM Studio Empower researchers to uncover new connections and make new discoveries using TDM Studio, a new solution for text and data mining (TDM). ...
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global™ database is the world's most comprehensive curated collection of multi-disciplinary dissertations and theses from thousands of universities around the world. Each month ProQuest posts the top 25 Most-Accessed Dissertations and Theses across all subjects, based upon total document views.
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global™ database is the world's most comprehensive curated collection of multi-disciplinary dissertations and theses from thousands of universities around the world. Each month ProQuest posts the top 25 Most-Accessed Dissertations and Theses across all subjects, based upon total document views.
ProQuest Dissertations and Theses (PQDT) is an online database that indexes, abstracts, and provides full-text access to dissertations and theses. The database includes over 2.4 million records and covers 1637 to the present. [1] [2] It is produced by ProQuest and was formerly known as ProQuest Digital Dissertations.
Within dissertations and theses is a wealth of scholarship, yet it is often overlooked because most go unpublished. Uncover new ideas and innovations with more confidence and effectiveness. ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global (PQDT) delivers a focused path of discovery by tapping into a global network of connected research.
With more than 5 million dissertations and theses, ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global is the most comprehensive collection of dissertations and theses in the world. PQDT Global connects scholarship from 4,100 universities, diverse voices, ideas, and perspectives can be viewed within a singular global context.
Most post-1990 titles are available in full text. ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global indexes dissertations and masters' theses from most North American graduate schools as well as some European universities. It provides full text for most indexed dissertations from 1990 to present. Search Dissertations & Theses. Giving to the Library.
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Publishing Lancaster University. Lancaster University is ranked as one of the United Kingdom's top institutions with a campus in Lancaster, UK, Ghana, Beijing, and Leipzig, Germany. It was named International University of the Year for 2020 by The Times and The Sunday Times Good University Guide 2020.
Top Dissertations Archives - January 2023. View the top 25 Most-Accessed Dissertations and Theses across all subjects, based upon total PDF downloads for January 2023. Read more.
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Citation Index: The newest collection on the Web of Science platform. Phase 1: Features coming Summer 2023. Discovery of 5.5M+ metadata records for dissertations and theses in a standalone database. Graduate works from 4K+ universities in 60+ countries around the world.
As of September 2010 all doctoral dissertations and masters theses are submitted to the Proquest Dissertations & Theses database. Electronic copies of doctoral dissertations began to be available in 1997 while masters theses began to be available in September 2010. After a dissertation or thesis is submitted to Graduate Studies, it can take up ...
Containing over 5 million citations and 2.7 million full-text works, "ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global (PQDT) is the world's largest multidisciplinary database for electronic theses and dissertations," wrote Alissa Droog for ccAdvisor. It will be most useful for graduate students looking for sample dissertations and theses or researchers ...
Provides online access to over 3.8 million dissertations and master's theses with 1.7 million available in full text for immediate downloading. Citations are available for dissertations dating from 1861 and full text online from 1997 for over 1,000 schools submitting to the ProQuest UMI database.
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global. Comprehensive collection of dissertations and theses from around the world, including millions of works from thousands of universities. 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.
ProQuest Dissertations and Theses. According to ProQuest, coverage begins with 1637. With more than 2.4 million entries, ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Global is the starting point for finding citations to doctoral dissertations and master's theses. Dissertations published from 1980 forward include 350-word abstracts written by the author.
Dissertations & Theses @ is a service for universities whose graduate students actively publish their doctoral dissertations and/or master's theses with ProQuest's Dissertation Publishing. Available to qualifying institutions on the ProQuest platform, Dissertations & Theses @ provides individual universities with access to the citations and ...
Publish Your Thesis or Dissertation. By publishing your thesis or dissertation with ProQuest Direct, you are joining global research communities through ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global and now, Web of Science.Your scholarship will not only advance your field of study, but also contribute to a global knowledge network, connecting research across time and space.
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Professional is an invaluable resource for cutting-edge research - often before it appears in scholarly journals - and for prior art investigations. The database currently holds more than 5 million dissertations and theses from around the world. Over 2.5 million have
According to the Graduate School's embargo policy, students can request up to a two-year embargo on their dissertation, with the potential for renewal by petition.If approved, the embargo would apply to the dissertation in ProQuest, as well as in Princeton's digital repository, DataSpace.Students in the sciences and engineering seeking patents or pursuing journal articles may be approved ...
ProQuest Dissertations and Theses: Global (PQDTGlobal) is the world's most comprehensive collection of full-text dissertations and theses. PQDTGlobal includes millions of searchable citations to dissertations and theses from 1861 to the present day together with over a million full-text dissertations that are available for download in PDF format, including most of the dissertations added since ...
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global™database is the world's most comprehensive curated collection of multi-disciplinary dissertations and theses from thousands of universities around the world. Each month ProQuest posts the top 25 Most-Accessed Dissertations and Theses across all subjects, based upon total document views.
ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Utilize ProQuest to read other dissertations or theses from your school or field to help guide your process. To view submitted theses and dissertations, visit ProQuest. University of Wisconsin Writing Center: Resources for Dissertators Resources for Dissertators lists helpful books and chapters that can inform ...
View the top 25 Most-Accessed Dissertations and Theses across all subjects, based upon total PDF downloads for September 2022. Read more Top Dissertations Archives - August 2022
Top Dissertations Archives - May 2021. View the top 25 Most-Accessed Dissertations and Theses across all subjects, based upon total PDF downloads for April 2021. Read more.
Include the full title of the thesis/dissertation in all-caps text just as it appears on the Abstract page. List the Author's name as it appears in University records. Declare this standardized degree statement on three separate single-spaced lines as follows: A [Dissertation OR Thesis] Submitted in Partial Fulfillment