Empirical Research is defined as research based on observed and measured phenomena. It is research that derives knowledge from actual experience rather than from theory or belief.
Requests for "Empirical" articles are usually from instructors in Education or Psychology; most other disciplines will ask for Scholarly, Peer Reviewed or Primary literature.
See if the article mentions 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, an interview conducted? All of these terms indicate possible methodologies used in empirical research.
Empirical articles often contain these sections:
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.
You could use the following search devices when using our Databases to find empirical research articles:
A. PsycINFO and PsycARTICLES. After entering search terms in boxes at top of screen, scroll down to Methodology and select: Empirical Study. Note there are subsets of Empirical Study below this entry that you could use.
B. ERIC. Type in your search terms and then scroll down the screen and change these values as shown on the right:
Other Publication Types to try are:
C. Other databases, such as Academic Search Premier or Education Research Complete: enter your search terms and then paste this string of terms into another search box:
study OR methodology OR subjects OR data OR results OR findings OR discussion
and change the pulldown to "Abstract".
Below is an example search for child abuse: