This presentation was provided by Stephanie Roth of Temple University, during the NISO event "Researcher Behaviors and the Impact of Technology," held on March 25, 2020.
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Roth "Tools to support systematic review research"
1. Tools to Support
Systematic Review
Research
NISO VIRTUAL CONFERENCE
Researcher Behaviors and the Impact of
Technology
March 25, 2020
Stephanie Clare Roth MLIS
Biomedical & Research Services Librarian
Temple University
Ginsburg Health Sciences Library
@StephanieRothSR
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5415-1718
CC-BY-NC-SA
4. 4
What is a Systematic
Review?
What is a Systematic Review?
A systematic review is an attempt to collect,
combine, and critically appraise a large body
of literature to answer a focused question
using predefined selection criteria. Formal
and rigorous steps exist to minimize bias and
enhance the trustworthiness or validity of the
results. Methods used must be fully reported
in order to be transparent and reproducible.
(Definition-Stephanie Roth 2020)
5. “
By failing to prepare you are
preparing to fail.
5
Learning Outcome 3.8
The researcher will identify systematic review tools
available to help with all stages of the review process.
Roth, S. (2018). Transforming the systematic review service: a team-based model to support
the educational needs of researchers. Journal of the Medical Library Association, 106(4),
514–520.
6. “
Technology is nothing. What’s important is that you have faith in
people, that they’re basically good and smart, and if you give them
them tools, they’ll do wonderful things with them.--Steve Jobs
6
Learning Outcome 4.4
The researcher will be able to use utilize the latest text mining
technologies as appropriate when building a comprehensive search
strategy.
Roth, S. (2018). Transforming the systematic review service: a team-based model to support
the educational needs of researchers. Journal of the Medical Library Association, 106(4),
514–520.
8. Open Source
and Free
Tools for
Systematic
Reviews
8
Planning Searching
Screening
Data
Abstraction
SR Stages
Temple University HSL Systematic Review Library Research Guide:
https://guides.temple.edu/systematicreviews
9. Tools for PlanningOpen Source
and Free
Tools for
Systematic
Reviews
PRISMA Checklist
PRISMA Flow Diagram
PRISMA-P for Protocols
9
Prospero
OSF Preregistrations
10. Place your screenshot here
10
PROSPERO
For systematic review
protocol registration in the
health sciences.
11. Place your screenshot here
11
OSF
Preregistrations
For any study type, create
a preregistration, option to
sign in with your ORCID
identifier or Institutional
login.
12. Tools for SearchingOpen Source
and Free
Tools for
Systematic
Reviews
Yale MeSH Analyzer
12
PubMed PubReMiner
18. Tools for Data AbstractionOpen Source
and Free
Tools for
Systematic
Reviews
Google Forms/Sheets
Airtable*
18
SRDR-Systematic Review Data
Repository
Sysrev*
* free and subscription
Cochrane Handbook (v. 2019)
Table 5.4.a Considerations in selecting data collection tools
https://training.cochrane.org/handbook/current/chapter-05#section-5-4-2
What data to collect?
https://training.cochrane.org/handbook/current/chapter-05#section-5-3
21. Thank you very much
for your time
21
If you have any questions please don’t hesitate
to contact me at:
▪ Email: stephanie.roth@temple.edu
▪ Twitter: @StephanieRothSR
▪ Link to resources/tools
https://guides.temple.edu/systematicreviews/SRTools
Credits: template by SlidesCarnival