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An Examination of Literature Searching Methodologies in Crop-Related Meta-Analyses Brad Brazzeal Agriculture & Forest Resources Librarian Mississippi State University
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What is a meta-analysis? “… the statistical analysis of the results of multiple independent studies, usually from the published and/or gray literature, to estimate the magnitude, consistency, homogeneity of an effect of interest” (Sherm et al., 2014)
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Importance of meta-analysis in agricultural research “Meta-analysis would make it possible to quantify variations of cropping system performances in interaction with soil and climate conditions more accurately across environments and socio-economic contexts” (Dore et al., 2011)
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Providing literature search details is vital Philibert et al. (2012) emphasize the need for … “Correct description of the bibliographic search procedures used by the authors to select individual studies …” “Listing of the references of the selected individual studies used in the meta-analysis” Koricheva and Gurevitch (2014) expand on Philbert’s first point … “Are details of full bibliographic search (electronic data bases [sic] used, keyword combinations, years) reported in sufficient detail to allow replication?”
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Questions addressed in this study Which databases are used when finding studies to include? Is enough information given for others to replicate the searches? Are non-journal articles typically included? Are clear lists of included studies provided?
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Methods Used the following search string in CAB Abstracts ( "crop production" OR "crop yield" OR "crop management" OR "cropping systems" ) AND "meta- analysis" NOT ( QTL OR "quantitative trait loci" ) Limited to academic journal articles in English published from 2011-2015
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Methods (contd.) Excluded articles that were (1) not a meta-anlaysis, (2) not based on publications, or (3) that just used previous publications from the authors Each was evaluated for the following: Databases authors used to find studies to include Details of search strategy Inclusion of non-journal publications Presence of a clear listing of studies included
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Results 117 articles from 57 journals met the criteria All but 4 were from JCR journals 19 results from Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment
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Databases Used Database NameStudies that Used It Science Citation Index / Web of Science / Web of Knowledge 61% Google Scholar22% China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI) / China Journal Net (CJN) 10% Scopus8% ScienceDirect7% CAB Abstracts5% Other sources mentioned 2 or 3 times: Agricola, AgEcon Search, FAO, JSTOR, RePEc, Springer
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Databases Used (contd.) Other sources mentioned 2 or 3 times: Agricola, AgEcon Search, FAO, JSTOR, RePEc, Springer 25% also searched reference lists to find studies 25% gave no indication of databases searched
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Details of search strategy ItemStudies Search terms complete enough to replicate34% Date of search / range of years given56% Both of the above26%* * By comparison, 22% of meta-analyses met the “repeatable procedure” criterion in Philibert et al. (2012), and 32% of meta- analyses that gave “complete details of bibliographic searches in Koricheva and Gurevitch (2014).
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Inclusion of non-journal publications Included Non-Journal Pubs?Studies Yes62% No13% Unclear26%
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Clear listing of studies included 90% of the meta-analyses included a list of studies Comparable to the 92% of meta-analysis that met the “references” criterion in Philibert et al. (2012)
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Conclusion Many crop-related meta-analyses do not provide sufficient information to replicate searches. Researchers wishing to conduct a meta-analysis could benefit from the expertise of librarians.
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References Doré, T., Makowski, D., Malézieux, E., Munier-Jolain, N., Tchamitchian, M., & Tittonell, P. (2011). Facing up to the paradigm of ecological intensification in agronomy: Revisiting methods, concepts and knowledge. European Journal of Agronomy, 34(4), 197-210. Koricheva, J., & Gurevitch, J. (2014). Use and misuses of meta-analysis in plant ecology. Journal of Ecology 102:828-844. Philibert, A., Loyce, C., & Makowski, D. (2012). Assessment of the quality of meta- analysis in agronomy. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment, 148, 72-82. Scherm, H., Thomas, C. S., Garrett, K. A., & Olsen, J. M. (2014). Meta-analysis and other approaches for synthesizing structured and unstructured data in plant pathology. Annual Review of Phytopathology 52:453-76.
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