A literature review is a description of the literature relevant to a particular field or topic. It gives an overview of what has been said, who the key writers are, what are the prevailing theories and hypotheses, what questions are being asked, and what methods and methodologies are appropriate and useful. As such, it is not in itself primary research, but rather it reports on other findings.
- Guide to writing an academic literature review
- What is a literature review?
- Stages of a literature review
- Organizing a literature review
- Further information and examples
PRISMA is an evidence-based minimum set of items for reporting in systematic reviews and meta-analyses. PRISMA focuses on the reporting of reviews evaluating randomized trials, but can also be used as a basis for reporting systematic reviews of other types of research, particularly evaluations of interventions.
More, klik http://www.prisma-statement.org/
Who should use PRISMA?
- Authors: PRISMA aims to help authors improve the reporting of systematic reviews and meta-analyses.
- Journal Peer reviewers and editors: PRISMA may also be useful for critical appraisal of published systematic reviews, although it is not a quality assessment instrument to gauge the quality of a systematic review.
More, klik http://www.prisma-statement.org/
- Literature Review: pengantar dan metode
- Systematic Literature Review: pengantar, tahapan dan studi kasus
- Literature review lengkap dari Charles Sturt University
- Literature Review: pengantar dan metode
- Systematic Literature Review pengantar, tahapan dan studi kasus
- Literature Review vs Systematic Review
- Traditional reviews vs. systematic reviews
- A Systematic Literature Review of Software Defect Prediction: Research Trends, Datasets, Methods and Frameworks
- Literature Reviews (Writing Center Univ. North Carolina)
- Writing a Systematic Literature Review: Resources for Students and Trainees
- How to write a review article?
- Literatature Review v.s Systematic Literature Review
- SLR Guidance