Graduate School of Library and Information Science. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Doi
Abstract
Meta-analysis is a method for summarizing statistical findings across
multiple research studies. It is a useful method for assessing the
level of agreement or disagreement surrounding a given research
question. The ability to perform meta-analysis is dependent on the
level of consistency in measures and the amount of data shared in
published research. Guidelines to minimum standards for reporting
research may improve the quality of writing in published research.
Inconsistencies in reporting research findings across studies, failing
to provide enough detail on method and instrumentation to
facilitate replication, and the multiplicity of different operational
definitions or measures for the same concept all pose difficulties to
successfully attempting any form of research synthesis. This article
presents a methodological explanation of meta-analysis, a literature
review describing the application of meta-analysis in library
and information science, and guidelines for reporting quantitative
research that would enable subsequent researchers to perform
meta-analysis.Submitted by Sarah Shreeves ([email protected]) on 2008-02-21T17:34:44Z
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Previous issue date: 2006published or submitted for publicatio
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