Sometimes you do not need a full literature review. You need references for one sentence.
That sentence may already be in your draft:
Sleep disruption is associated with poorer glycemic control in adults with type 2 diabetes.
The traditional way to find references is to break the sentence into keywords, search a database, skim titles, and manually decide which papers might support it.
Sentence-level search starts from the sentence itself. Instead of asking you to become a keyword engineer, it asks: what source would support this exact wording?
You can start from the find references by sentence page or use the broader reverse literature search workflow.
When sentence-level reference search works best
Searching by sentence is useful when the sentence already contains a clear academic claim.
Good fit:
- a relationship between two variables
- a clinical or biomedical finding
- a mechanism that needs evidence
- a sentence in a literature review
- a claim that a reviewer asked you to support
- a paragraph where several claims need citations one by one
Poor fit:
- a vague sentence with no clear subject
- an opinion or recommendation without evidence criteria
- a sentence that combines too many unrelated claims
- a broad background statement that needs a review, not one source
If the sentence is too broad, rewrite it before searching.
Sentence search versus keyword search
Keyword search is good when you are exploring a topic.
Sentence search is better when you already know what the citation must support.
| Task | Better approach |
|---|---|
| Learn a new field | Keyword search |
| Map major authors and journals | Keyword search |
| Add a citation to one draft sentence | Sentence search |
| Check whether a claim has support | Sentence search |
| Backfill references into finished paragraphs | Sentence search |
The two methods are not enemies. In practice, many writers use keyword search for discovery and sentence search for citation placement.
A practical workflow
1. Paste one sentence at a time
Do not paste a whole page when you only need one citation. Start with a single sentence so the search target is clear.
Better:
Early mobilization after surgery is associated with shorter hospital stays.
Harder to search:
Early mobilization after surgery improves recovery, lowers costs, reduces complications, and increases patient satisfaction.
The second sentence may need several sources because it contains several claims.
2. Keep the scientific relationship intact
Do not remove the key relationship when simplifying the sentence.
Weak input:
mobilization surgery hospital
Better input:
Early mobilization after surgery is associated with shorter hospital stays.
The better version preserves the relationship you need the source to support.
3. Review the evidence, not only the paper title
Once you get candidate papers, inspect the evidence passage.
Ask:
- Does the passage support the full sentence?
- Is the population similar enough?
- Is the effect or association in the same direction?
- Is the source making a conclusion, or only introducing a topic?
A related title is not enough.
4. Adjust your sentence if the evidence is narrower
Good sources often support a narrower version of your original sentence.
Original:
Digital health tools improve chronic disease outcomes.
Evidence-supported revision:
In some chronic disease management programs, digital health tools can improve monitoring and adherence outcomes.
That revision is more careful and easier to defend.
5. Export the citation after checking support
When the source fits, export the citation and add it to the sentence. If the evidence is weak, keep searching or rewrite the claim.
For a related workflow, see how to add references to existing content.
Examples of strong and weak input sentences
Strong:
Mindfulness-based interventions can reduce perceived stress among university students.
Why it works: population, intervention, and outcome are clear.
Weak:
Mindfulness is important.
Why it fails: it does not define what kind of importance needs support.
Strong:
Low health literacy is associated with poorer medication adherence in patients with chronic disease.
Why it works: the relationship and population are specific.
Weak:
Health literacy affects people.
Why it fails: it is too broad to verify with one citation.
The goal is not just to find references
The goal is to place the right reference next to the right sentence.
That means the paper should not only exist. It should support the sentence in context. Sentence-level search helps because it keeps your actual writing at the center of the workflow.
Use it when you have a draft sentence, need evidence quickly, and want to avoid citations that are only loosely related.
