Book | Journal Article | Website | |
Length | Long: Can be 100+ pages. | Shorter: Can range from 1-30+ pages. | Varies by website, but website pages are generally brief. |
Coverage | Broad scope, high detail and big picture information. | Narrow scope, high detail and academic interest topics. | Current events, trends, government publications, interviews or conference reports. |
Publication Frequency | Published once, but newer editions can come out later. | Composed of volumes and issues published on a regular basis (weekly or monthly). | If the website is maintained, the information can have up-to-the minute information. |
Advantages | Books in the medical field are generally great places to look for background information, comprehensive accounts of research and deep analysis of a topic. | Articles are good for finding information written by scholars and subject experts. Articles found in scholarly journals might have gone through a peer-review process which adds to the quality of the information. Some articles can provide background information while others focus on particular studies. | Websites can provide the most current news and information from current events, trends and popular topics. They are good for finding time sensitive information. |
Disadvantages | The publishing process for books can take years and therefore, the information included is not the best place to look for current topics. | The peer-review process can take a long time so the articles will not contain up-to-the-minute information, but can be more current than a book. | Authorship sometimes can be difficult to determine. Anyone can publish on the web and website information can be innaccurate and biased. Sometimes the information can be outdated. There is also a limited amount of scholarly information on the web. |
Where to Find | In the library catalog online or book stacks. | In a library database. | On the World Wide Web. |