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Conducting a Subject Search (continued)

I now have three sets of concepts. Since I want them all to appear in my search, I need to combine the Sets using the AND logical operator. I enter the following search at the question mark prompt and press ENTER.

?s s1 and s2 and s3
           51775  S1
           44744  S2
           41516  S3
      S4     130  S1 AND S2 AND S3

I am now ready to view some of the records from my search. I want to view Set 4, which contains the combined sets.

If I have too many records, there are several ways to narrow a free-text subject search.

We can use Classification Codes to narrow to a certain type of technology.
Learn More

We can use publication or application dates to narrow to specific dates or date ranges.
Learn More

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Authoritative Answers Enriched by ProQuest

Learn More #4:

Classification Codes

Once we have completed a free-text subject search, we may want to restrict our search to specific classes of inventions. Within the U.S. patent system similar subject matter is brought together in large groupings called classes. There are also international class codes.

Classification Codes are numbers that are assigned to patents by the patent issuing authority. U.S. class codes are searched with the prefix CL=; international class codes use the prefix IC=.

U.S. Class Codes

International Class Codes


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Learn More #5:

Dates

Dates can be an effective way to narrow a search. We can search on publication/patent year, publication/patent date, or application date and year.

The table below illustrates the different formats.

Field Format Example
Application Date s ad=YYYYMMDD
s ad=YYMMDD
s am=YYMM
s ay=YYYY
s ad=19980204
s ad=980204
s am=9210
s ay=1998
Publication/Patent Date s pd=YYMMDD s pd=990401
Publication/Patent Year s py=YYYY s py=1999

Note: You can also use a four-digit month: AM=YYYYMM.

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