How do I find a specific article?

If you have the article title, and perhaps the author, you can probably find the article you're looking for by searching Google Scholar.  Type in the article title in quotes (only use quotes if you're 100% sure you have the title correct).  For example, "Reduced Ventral Cingulum Integrity and Increased Behavioral Problems in Children with Isolated Optic Nerve Hypoplasia and Mild to Moderate or No Visual Impairment."  If you have the authors' last name(s), you can add that, too, but not between quotes.  You will likely then find a full citation in your search results:
 

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To the right, you may see full-text access options.  Sometimes articles are open access, meaning they are available for free on the publisher's website, or sometimes on scholarly networks, such as university repositories or websites like Research Gate.  Try the links to see if you can get free access.  If you hit a paywall, meaning you have to login as a subscriber, or pay to view, go back to Google Scholar and see if there is a Get It @ Madigan link.  Sometimes it is on the right side, and sometimes you need to click on the double arrow brackets in the row underneath the citation to see it:

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If this doesn't work and you know what journal the article is in, search Journal Locator. This time, type in the title of the journal (not the title of the article) and click the search button.
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This will show you if we have full-text access to that journal in one of our databases.  If we do, you will see a link to the journal home page within the database:
 
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From there, you can browse the journal by volume/issue/date, or do a search within the publication to find your specific article.

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