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Living systematic reviews: 2. Combining human and machine effort

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posted on 2025-05-11, 23:34 authored by James Thomas, Anna Noel-Storr, Julian Elliott, Living Systematic Review Network, Thomas Agoritsas, John Hilton, Caroline Perron, Elie Akl, Rebecca HodderRebecca Hodder, Charlotte Pestridge, Lauren Albrecht, Tanya Horsley, Iain Marshall, Luke WolfendenLuke Wolfenden, Byron Wallace, Steven McDonald, Chris Mavergames, Paul Glasziou, Ian Shemilt, Anneliese Synnot, Tari Turner
New approaches to evidence synthesis, which use human effort and machine automation in mutually reinforcing ways, can enhance the feasibility and sustainability of living systematic reviews. Human effort is a scarce and valuable resource, required when automation is impossible or undesirable, and includes contributions from online communities ("crowds") as well as more conventional contributions from review authors and information specialists. Automation can assist with some systematic review tasks, including searching, eligibility assessment, identification and retrieval of full-text reports, extraction of data, and risk of bias assessment. Workflows can be developed in which human effort and machine automation can each enable the other to operate in more effective and efficient ways, offering substantial enhancement to the productivity of systematic reviews. This paper describes and discusses the potential-and limitations-of new ways of undertaking specific tasks in living systematic reviews, identifying areas where these human/machine "technologies" are already in use, and where further research and development is needed. While the context is living systematic reviews, many of these enabling technologies apply equally to standard approaches to systematic reviewing.

Funding

NHMRC

1114605

History

Journal title

Journal of Clinical Epidemiology

Volume

91

Issue

November

Pagination

31-37

Publisher

Elsevier

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Health and Medicine

School

School of Medicine and Public Health

Rights statement

© 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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