| Literature DB >> 26984257 |
Neal R Haddaway1, Claes Bernes2, Bengt-Gunnar Jonsson3, Katarina Hedlund4.
Abstract
Reviews of evidence are a vital means of summarising growing bodies of research. Systematic reviews (SRs) aim to reduce bias and increase reliability when summarising high priority and controversial topics. Similar to SRs, systematic maps (SMs) were developed in social sciences to reliably catalogue evidence on a specific subject. Rather than providing answers to specific questions of impacts, SMs aim to produce searchable databases of studies, along with detailed descriptive information. These maps (consisting of a report, a database, and sometimes a geographical information system) can prove highly useful for research, policy and practice communities, by providing assessments of knowledge gaps (subjects requiring additional research), knowledge gluts (subjects where full SR is possible), and patterns across the research literature that promote best practice and direct research resources towards the highest quality research. Here, we introduce SMs in detail using three recent case studies that demonstrate their utility for research and decision-making.Entities:
Keywords: Environmental policy; Evidence review; Evidence-informed policy; Forestry; Secondary synthesis; Soil carbon
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26984257 PMCID: PMC4980318 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-016-0773-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Fig. 1Published systematic map articles over time from Web of Science (WoS) (topic word search; “systematic map”) and systematic map protocols and reports published in Environmental Evidence (EEJ) (currently not indexed in WoS) (Haddaway et al. 2015a)
Key differences between systematic maps and systematic reviews according to the procedural steps used. ‘Key elements’ refer to the population, intervention or exposure, comparator and outcome components of the study question
| Systematic reviews | Systematic maps | |
|---|---|---|
| Objective | Question concerns the efficacy of an environmental management intervention or impact of an exposure | Question concerns the state of the evidence base for a specific topic (commonly based on one or more related interventions or exposures) |
| The topic | Typically narrow, focused question with single/few interventions/exposures and single/few outcomes | Typically broader question involving multiple interventions/exposures and/or multiple outcomes |
| Searches for evidence | Search terms specified for most key elements, resulting in a moderate volume of evidence | More sensitive (wider reaching) search string with some key element terms not strictly specified, resulting in a larger volume of evidence |
| Study inclusion | Inclusion criteria typically specified in detail and defined for all key elements | Inclusion criteria may not be explicitly defined for all key elements, possibly being included iteratively during the review |
| Data extraction | Complete extraction of meta-data and study findings (qualitative or quantitative) | Extraction of meta-data only |
| Critical appraisal | Assessment of internal validity (quality) and external validity (generalisability) performed for all included studies | Study internal validity may be appraised but generalisability typically not assessed |
| Synthesis | Narrative synthesis of the evidence base along with quantitative or qualitative synthesis of study findings | Narrative synthesis of the evidence base but no synthesis of study findings |
| Key review outputs | Qualitative and quantitative (where possible) summary effect estimated, implications for policy/practice, implications for research | Searchable database of relevant studies, implications for research (primary/secondary), and making the knowledge base available to policy/practice |