You may find a source, but not be sure what kind of source it is. Some databases will label sources broadly, such as "periodical" or "article". Check this chart, or ask a librarian for help.
|
Popular Magazines |
Scholarly (including peer-reviewed) |
Trade Publications |
Content |
Current events; general interest articles
|
Research results/reports; reviews of research (review articles); book reviews
|
Articles about a certain business or industry |
Purpose |
To inform, entertain, or elicit an emotional response |
To share research or scholarship with the academic community |
To inform about business or industry news, trends, or products |
Author |
Staff writers, journalists, freelancers |
Scholars/researchers |
Staff writers, business/industry professionals |
Audience |
General public |
Scholars, researchers, students |
Business/industry professionals |
Review |
Staff editor |
Editorial board made up of other scholars and researchers. Some articles are peer-reviewed |
Staff editor |
Citations |
May not have citations, or may be informal (ex. according to... or links) |
Bibliographies, references, endnotes, footnotes |
Few, may or may not have any |
Frequency |
Weekly/monthly |
Quarterly or semi-annually |
Weekly/monthly |
Ads |
Numerous ads for a variety of products |
Minimal, usually only for scholarly products like books |
Ads are for products geared toward specific industry |
Examples |
Time; Vogue; Rolling Stone; New Yorker |
Journal of Southern History; Developmental Psychology; American Literature; New England Journal of Medicine |
Pharmacy Times; Oil and Gas Investor Magazine |
Table source: UT Libraries