SRLibProblems
@srlibproblems.bsky.social
360 followers 130 following 230 posts
Discussing all things #EvidenceSynthesis, quotes from #SysRev consultations, & critiquing published non-systematic #SysRev searches. I am a 🇨🇦 #skybrarian. #canmedlib #medlibs
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
srlibproblems.bsky.social
I'm going to have to look into the options (and tools) for citation chaining again, in the near future, but from this perspective. #EvidenceSynthesis
srlibproblems.bsky.social
I tried Zotero earlier, which sources metadata from Crossref & was surprised to see the same (missing abstracts) when using the "add item by identifier" function

It was great (timely) to see @aarontay.bsky.social discuss abstracts (+ the implications) this week aarontay.substack.com/p/the-petrol...
srlibproblems.bsky.social
In my case, it was a small number of records with missing abstracts & I had the DOIs, so I decided to manually locate the missing data (from Primo at my institution, or via the publisher page) to add/edit the RIS file. Doing so will allow the records to be screened without disruption, in Covidence.
srlibproblems.bsky.social
To be clear, the problem is not the tool (Citation Chaser or Lens.org, where Citation Chaser gets its metadata from). The problem is the publishers that are withholding and preventing the abstracts from being openly available.

And the impact in this case, is on screening at the title-abstract level
srlibproblems.bsky.social
Chasing down abstracts while pulling records for citation chaining (in this case, backwards citation chaining) is no fun and reduces efficiency. Tools like Citation Chaser are awesome, but (as I noticed earlier this week) the process becomes less efficient when some records are missing abstracts.
Lens.org
srlibproblems.bsky.social
I think you might also enjoy "PRISMA compliant"[tiab:~2]
srlibproblems.bsky.social
students who use it for a one off, who want to download 20-50 search results so they can explore them further in a citation manager, will be inconvenienced.

I wish database vendors would allow small batch record downloading without accounts, and have the RIS format as a standard available format.
srlibproblems.bsky.social
Not liking this spreading practice where database providers now require use of an account to download any records or in specific formats (RIS); not even a small number. I know advanced users (including evidence synthesis librarians/researchers) will create their accounts and continue along but
srlibproblems.bsky.social
You would not get those records if you searched human rights in TI OR AB because it will parse each line separately and use AND between the words but stay within the field.

This is how I understood what the page said. Please do share if I am missing something. From what I see, I can safely use XB
srlibproblems.bsky.social
In this case, " ", or the proximity operator would override the default mode (find all terms, etc) so no impact. But if you searched human rights (with no " ") in XB versus TI or AB, you would get different results. In XB, you will find instances where human is in title and rights is in the abstract
srlibproblems.bsky.social
It sounds like the issues would only happen in situations where the default mode is activated (find all terms, or proximity). But, this won't apply to most systematic searches. For example, most librarians will use "human rights" with " " around the phrase, or a proximity (human N3 rights).
srlibproblems.bsky.social
Never been so happy to have followed good #DataManagement practices. There were times that I almost didn't take the time to use the naming convention, but I resisted.

I must remember to thank my awesome colleagues for inspiring this in my practice (they know who they are ❤️). #CanMedLibs
srlibproblems.bsky.social
Saw a post about moving searches out of custom folders in EBSCO, which reminded me to get on it.
I moved 105 saved searches from 20 custom folders into one saved searches folder 😒. Thankfully, no renaming needed as I used this naming convention from the start: libguides.ucalgary.ca/DMPforSR/dat...
Library: Guide to the DMP Assistant Template for Systematic Review Projects: Data Collection
Companion guide to the Portage DMP Assistant Template for Systematic Review Projects
libguides.ucalgary.ca
srlibproblems.bsky.social
Why is it an OR? Go with AND - do both!
srlibproblems.bsky.social
This is also true when switching from Ovid to other platforms. Adj3 (Ovid) = N2 (EBSCO) = NEAR/2 (WoS). I don't have Embase on the other platform (only Ovid) so I'm of no help here.
srlibproblems.bsky.social
I often say that PRESS is for requests between search experts, and give an example of peer reviewing another librarian's search. But that I would be happy to review and advise on their search as part of our consultation options.

TL;DR - we don't offer a PRESS option for student searches.
srlibproblems.bsky.social
Review & provide feedback - yes (in consult or via email), but I don't think of that as "peer review" & certainly not with PRESS. It is rare to receive such a request AND where the search is good enough to qualify as a peer review. Not impossible though, as there have been 3 or 4 in 5 years.
srlibproblems.bsky.social
The intent is (Controlled fields) NOT (uncontrolled fields). In MEDLINE, we wouldn't use the same terms in both since we'd browse and find the MeSH terms. But, in Scopus, in the absence of deliberate/separate Index term gathering, you could use the same set of terms as shown in my example above.
srlibproblems.bsky.social
(Index terms) NOT (title, abstract, authkey) would match the intent. So, in Scopus syntax it would be (for e.g.):

INDEXTERMS("corporate social responsibility" OR {CSR}) AND NOT ( ( TITLE-ABS("corporate social responsibility" OR {CSR}) ) OR ( AUTHKEY("corporate social responsibility" OR {CSR}) ) )
srlibproblems.bsky.social
But if new synonyms keep finding new relevant articles (and recall matters at all - such as in lit review assignments), then you keep going with the iterative refinement. I do tend to emphasize the importance of starting with a good set of terms/synonyms (grouped in concepts).
srlibproblems.bsky.social
Comprehensiveness may be too strong a term. I teach synonym generation in the initial search string development & then it gets added to as part of iterative search refinement (i.e. evaluate the first set of abstracts and add new synonyms to the search). The stopping point depends on the search need.
srlibproblems.bsky.social
Yes, strategies to broaden/narrow is commonly taught, with the objective of either finding more articles or reducing noise or volume. Comprehensiveness of synonyms used and its impact (on number of results) is also covered. Fundamentally, this gets at the principles of it, without defining the terms
srlibproblems.bsky.social
This is part of info lit though (matching the search approach to the objective). Not doing so is definitely a mistake. High recall searches are normal in SR work, but an unexpected perk for me was an improvement in my precision searching, as I know many more advanced strategies.
srlibproblems.bsky.social
The 'Search History' screen on the new EBSCO UI now shows result numbers for each line. We can finally take screenshots to demonstrate the remaining problems 😅 - Happy Friday #IYKYK #Medlibs #CanMedlibs
srlibproblems.bsky.social
Yes, I agree. Also, there is no label next to the button (like in Scopus), so some folks may not know what it means.