Handsearching had best recall but poor efficiency when exporting to a bibliographic tool: case study

information retrieval
Authors

Cooper, C.

Snowsill, T.

Worsley, C.

Prowse, A.

O’Mara-Eves, A.

Greenwood, H.

Boulton, E.

Strickson, A.

Published

Jul 2020

Abstract

Objectives: The objective of this study was to compare the effectiveness and efficiency of methods used to identify and export conference abstracts into a bibliographic management tool. Study Design and Setting: This is a case study. The effectiveness and efficiency of methods to identify and export conference abstracts presented at the American Society of Hematology (ASH) conference 2016–2018 for a systematic review were evaluated. A reference standard handsearch of conference proceedings was compared with: 1) contacting Blood (the journal that report ASH proceedings); 2) keyword searching; 3) searching Embase; 4) searching MEDLINE via EndNote; and 5) searching CPCI-S. Effectiveness was determined by the number of abstracts identified compared with the reference standard, whereas efficiency was a comparison between the resources required to identify and export conference abstracts compared with the reference standard. Results: Six hundred and four potentially eligible and 15 confirmed eligible conference abstracts (abstracts included in the review) were identified by the handsearch. Comparator 2 was the only method to identify all abstracts and it was more efficient than the reference standard. Comparators 1 and 3–5 missed a number of eligible abstracts. Conclusion: This study raises potentially concerning questions about searching for conferences’ abstracts by methods other than directly searching the original conference proceedings. Efficiency of exporting would be improved if journals permitted bulk downloads.

Citation

BibTeX citation:
@article{c.2020,
  author = {Cooper, C. and Snowsill, T. and Worsley, C. and Prowse, A.
    and O’Mara-Eves, A. and Greenwood, H. and Boulton, E. and Strickson,
    A.},
  title = {Handsearching Had Best Recall but Poor Efficiency When
    Exporting to a Bibliographic Tool: Case Study},
  journal = {Journal of Clinical Epidemiology},
  volume = {123},
  pages = {39-48},
  date = {2020-07-01},
  url = {https://tristansnowsill.co.uk/handsearching-had-best-recall-but-poor-efficiency.html},
  doi = {10.1016/j.jclinepi.2020.03.013},
  langid = {en},
  abstract = {Objectives: The objective of this study was to compare the
    effectiveness and efficiency of methods used to identify and export
    conference abstracts into a bibliographic management tool. Study
    Design and Setting: This is a case study. The effectiveness and
    efficiency of methods to identify and export conference abstracts
    presented at the American Society of Hematology (ASH) conference
    2016–2018 for a systematic review were evaluated. A reference
    standard handsearch of conference proceedings was compared with: 1)
    contacting Blood (the journal that report ASH proceedings); 2)
    keyword searching; 3) searching Embase; 4) searching MEDLINE via
    EndNote; and 5) searching CPCI-S. Effectiveness was determined by
    the number of abstracts identified compared with the reference
    standard, whereas efficiency was a comparison between the resources
    required to identify and export conference abstracts compared with
    the reference standard. Results: Six hundred and four potentially
    eligible and 15 confirmed eligible conference abstracts (abstracts
    included in the review) were identified by the handsearch.
    Comparator 2 was the only method to identify all abstracts and it
    was more efficient than the reference standard. Comparators 1 and
    3–5 missed a number of eligible abstracts. Conclusion: This study
    raises potentially concerning questions about searching for
    conferences’ abstracts by methods other than directly searching the
    original conference proceedings. Efficiency of exporting would be
    improved if journals permitted bulk downloads.}
}
For attribution, please cite this work as:
Cooper, C., Snowsill, T., Worsley, C., Prowse, A., O’Mara-Eves, A., Greenwood, H., Boulton, E., and Strickson, A. 2020. “Handsearching Had Best Recall but Poor Efficiency When Exporting to a Bibliographic Tool: Case Study.” Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 123 (July): 39–48. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclinepi.2020.03.013.