Literature DB >> 11230385

Comparison of information processing technologies.

J F Piniewski-Bond1, G M Buck, R S Horowitz, J H Schuster, D L Weed, J M Weiner.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To examine the type of information obtainable from scientific papers, using three different methods for the extraction, organization, and preparation of literature reviews.
DESIGN: A set of three review papers was identified, and the ideas represented by the authors of those papers were extracted. The 161 articles referenced in those three reviews were then analyzed using 1) a formalized data extraction approach, which uses a protocol-driven manual process to extract the variables, values, and statistical significance of the stated relationships; and 2) a computerized approach known as "Idea Analysis," which uses the abstracts of the original articles and processes them through a computer software program that reads the abstracts and organizes the ideas presented by the authors. The results were then compared. The literature focused on the human papillomavirus and its relationship to cervical cancer.
RESULTS: Idea Analysis was able to identify 68.9 percent of the ideas considered by the authors of the three review papers to be of importance in describing the association between human papillomavirus and cervical cancer. The formalized data extraction identified 27 percent of the authors' ideas. The combination of the two approaches identified 74.3 percent of the ideas considered important in the relationship between human papillomavirus and cervical cancer, as reported by the authors of the three review articles.
CONCLUSION: This research demonstrated that both a technically derived and a computer derived collection, categorization, and summarization of original articles and abstracts could provide a reliable, valid, and reproducible source of ideas duplicating, to a major degree, the ideas presented by subject specialists in review articles. As such, these tools may be useful to experts preparing literature reviews by eliminating many of the clerical-mechanical features associated with present-day scientific text processing.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11230385      PMCID: PMC134556          DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2001.0080174

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc        ISSN: 1067-5027            Impact factor:   4.497


  9 in total

1.  SCOUT: information retrieval from full-text medical literature.

Authors:  G P Purcell; D D Mar
Journal:  Proc Annu Symp Comput Appl Med Care       Date:  1992

2.  The Medline/full-text research project.

Authors:  E J McKinin; M Sievert; E D Johnson; J A Mitchell
Journal:  J Am Soc Inf Sci       Date:  1991-05

3.  Quantitatively expressed ideas in lymphoma: text versus numerical displays.

Authors:  N Yamaguchi; L Latinwo; R S Horowitz; J M Weiner
Journal:  Med Inform (Lond)       Date:  1987 Oct-Dec

4.  The weight of medical knowledge.

Authors:  D T Durack
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1978-04-06       Impact factor: 91.245

5.  Access to data and the information explosion: oral contraceptives and risk of cancer.

Authors:  J M Weiner; S Shirley; N J Gilman; S M Stowe; R M Wolf
Journal:  Contraception       Date:  1981-09       Impact factor: 3.375

6.  Periodic health examination, 1995 update: 1. Screening for human papillomavirus infection in asymptomatic women. Canadian Task Force on the Periodic Health Examination.

Authors:  K Johnson
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  1995-02-15       Impact factor: 8.262

Review 7.  Human papillomavirus infection. Recent findings on progression to cervical cancer.

Authors:  A A Adimora; E B Quinlivan
Journal:  Postgrad Med       Date:  1995-09       Impact factor: 3.840

Review 8.  Human papillomaviruses, cervical cancer and the developing world.

Authors:  H D Birley
Journal:  Ann Trop Med Parasitol       Date:  1995-10

Review 9.  Tracing expert thinking in clinical trial design.

Authors:  M H Malogolowkin; R S Horowitz; J A Ortega; S E Siegel; G D Hammond; J M Weiner
Journal:  Comput Biomed Res       Date:  1989-04
  9 in total
  2 in total

1.  Get both the medicine and the informatics right.

Authors:  W W Stead; P F Brennan
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2001 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 4.497

2.  A knowledgebase system to enhance scientific discovery: Telemakus.

Authors:  Sherrilynne S Fuller; Debra Revere; Paul F Bugni; George M Martin
Journal:  Biomed Digit Libr       Date:  2004-09-21
  2 in total

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