Suppose you want to find the presentation "Evolving Optical Fiber Designs" made by K.M. Able at the 1997 IEEE Canadian Conference on Electrical and Computer Engineering using Advanced Search. You might construct a search query that looks similar to this:
Example 1: ("Evolving Optical Fiber Designs" <in> ti) <and> ("Electrical and Computer Engineering " <in> ct) <and> (Able <in> au) <and> (1997 <in> cy)
Example 2: (Optical Designs <in> ti) <and> (Electrical Engineering <in> ct) <and> (Able <in> au)
You can use quotation marks around your search text to indicate that you want IEEE Xplore® to look for that exact search string with no word stem variations. See Searching for an Exact Word or Phrase for more information. If you want to look for specific variations, see Searching for a Root Word and Words Derived from It.
The <in> operator indicates that you want IEEE Xplore® to search for the phrase in a specific field of the citation record, such as the title (ti), conference title ct), author (au), or meeting date (cy) field. See Field Codes and Definitions for more information.
Note: If you do not use the <in> operator, IEEE Xplore® searches all fields.
To focus this search on just the conference proceedings collection, deselect Journals and Standards under "Select publication types" in the Search Options box. Also, you can narrow the search to a specific date range by using "Select Years to Search". See Using Search Options for more information.
If you are missing information such as the exact journal title, presentation title, or presenter, enter what you know and add a keyword.
Example: (electrical computer engineering <in> ct) <and> (optical fiber)
See Searching When You Have Limited Information for more about this topic.
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