On 2016 Mar 15, Wichor Bramer commented:
Dear Hilda,
Thank you for your insightful comments, much appreciated. I have left comments via PubMed Commons before, but have never received any from other researchers. I will respond to your comments point by point:
1) As we described in the last line of the second to last paragraph of the methods section of our paper, we searched all three databases post-hoc for included references.
2) We searched the largest Ovid Medline files comprising Ovid MEDLINE® In-Process & Other Non-Indexed Citations. For clarity for endusers at Erasmus MC this is the only Medline database shown, and it is referred to as Medline, though it includes non-Medline PMC records. Articles retrieved from PubMed, the subset as supplied by publishers, were not classified as resulting from Medline Ovid searches, but rather as unique results from PubMed publisher subset (a classification not used in this article, but that will be used in other articles from partially overlapping datasets).
3) As you pointed out, Bramer WM, 2015 is not a systematic review. After article acceptance, I realized it would have been wise to limit our study to medical research questions only (this being the only non-medical topic). Not all 120 searches have resulted in published systematic reviews. In some cases, the process is is ongoing and in others results were used to create other end products, such as clinical practice guidelines, grant proposals and chapters for theses. In 47 of the searches used in this research the resulting articles have been published in PubMed. That selection can be viewed via http://bit.ly/bramer-srs-gs.
4) Criteria for searches to be included this research were that
a) researchers had requested librarian-mediated searches because they intended to write a systematic review (in that view, the title should be read as 120 systematic review requests)
b) titles and abstracts for the results for all databases had been reviewed
c) the full text of the relevant abstract had been critically read and
d) the resulting relevant references had been reported to us or were extractable from the resulting publication.
Whether the searches result in finished published systematic reviews is independent of the search process. Retrospectively, it would have been wise to include a paragraph on this in the article.
5) One of the peer reviewers also mentioned the expected difference between certain topics, and advised us to investigate that relation. However, it would be very complicated to group 120 unique and diverse topics systematically and even within broad subjects such as surgery or pediatrics one can expect variation between research questions. For very distinct topics such as nursing or psychology one can expect differences, because of the need to search Cinahl, respectively PsycINFO, but these research topics were scarce among our set. We do not believe huge differences were to occur regarding the performance of GS between different topics, as the overall performance remains too low. We did observe that for uncomplicated questions GS performed better than for search strategies with many synonyms.
6) We chose not to investigate in detail what the missed studies would have meant for the conclusion of the reviews. Partially because of the vast number of topics, but also because we feel this does not add value to our conclusion about coverage, precision and recall. If searches in GS were likely to find fewer than 40% of all relevant references, or in Embase a high likelihood that fewer than 80% were retrieved, expected recall is too low for the systematic review, no matter what the quality was of retrieved results. In follow-up research where best database combinations are compared (in that case for published medical systematic reviews, so only partially overlapping with this set) we plan to investigate in detail why certain references were found by GS but not by traditional databases. One of the reasons could be that articles are retrieved from lower quality journals, as GS lacks quality requirements for inclusion, however there can be other reasons.
Kind regards,
Wichor Bramer
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