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Library Resources for Behavioral & Social Sciences: Finding Empirical Sources

This guide provides an overview of library services, focusing specifically on research for Behavioral and Social Sciences.

Finding Empirical Sources

Your professor may have required you to find empirical sources or empirical data.  In the Behavioral Sciences these are known as primary sources because they are original studies written by the researchers.

According to LiveScience, empirical data is "Information that is acquired by observation or experimentation and is used to prove or disprove a hypothesis."

Think about your experience with:

  • Writing a lab report for science class using the Scientific Method, with a hypothesis, materials, methods, data collected, analysis of the data, and conclusion.
  • Creating surveys and polls in a psychology or sociology class and analyzing the results.
  • Learning about standard deviation, N for number of people, and outliers in statistics class.
  • Drug testing by pharmaceutical companies with two groups, one getting the drug and one getting a placebo (the control group).

Empirical articles are usually found in peer-reviewed journals. Words to look for in the title or abstract include:

  • Clinical report
  • Study
  • Survey
  • Results

Empirical articles will have sections similar to writing a lab report using the Scientific Method, such as Methods, Anyalysis, and Conclusion.

Empirical articles have sections such as methods and statistical analysis.

Do I have an empirical article?

How can I determine if I have found an Empirical Article?

When looking at an article or the abstract of an article, here are some guidelines to use to decide if an article is an empirical article:

  • Is the article published in an academic, scholarly, or professional journal? Popular magazines such as Business Week or Newsweek do not publish empirical articles; academic journals such as Business Communication Quarterly or Journal of Psychology may publish empirical articles. Some professional journals such as JAMA: Journal of the American Medical Association publish empirical research. Other professional journals such as Coach & Athletic Director publish articles of professional interest, but they do not usually publish research articles.
  • Does the abstract of the article mention a study, an observation, an analysis, or a number of participants or subjects? Was data collected, a survey or questionnaire administered, an assessment or measurement used, or an interview conducted? All of these terms indicate possible methodologies used in empirical research.
  • Empirical articles normally contain these sections:
       1. Introduction
       2. Literature review
       3. Methodology
       4. Results
       5. Discussion
       6. Conclusion
       7. References
    The sections may be combined and may have different headings or no headings at all; however, the information that would fall within these sections should be present in an empirical article.
  • How long is the article? An empirical article is usually substantial; it is normally three or more pages long.

If you are not sure if an article is an empirical research article, share the article citation with a librarian and we can help!

Finding Empirical Articles at BC

Conceptual vs. Empirical Research

conceptual vs empirical research

Anatomy of a Scholarly Article (focusing mostly on Empirical Articles)

Click on the icon below to watch a short video on the "Anatomy of a Scholarly Article" (from North Carolina State University). 

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Or you can use this quick interactive site to review the "Anatomy of a Scholarly Article" (from North Carolina State University). Directions: click on the link to activate the interactive site. 

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