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| Tổng quan lập bản đồ× | Tổng quan tường thuật× | Tổng quan phạm vi× | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lĩnh vực | Trắc lượng khoa học | Trắc lượng khoa học | Trắc lượng khoa học |
| Họ | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Năm ra đời≠ | Late 1990s–2000s; major methodological formalization ~2010s | Pre-20th century practice; peer-reviewed methodological guidance from 2000s onward | 2005 |
| Người khởi xướng≠ | Buckland & Gann (1998); formalized by systematic review community (Campbell Collaboration, Collaboration for Environmental Evidence) | Traditional academic practice; formalized discussion by Green, Johnson & Adams (2006) | Hilary Arksey & Lisa O'Malley |
| Loại≠ | Systematic evidence mapping methodology | Literature review methodology | Evidence synthesis review design |
| Công trình gốc≠ | James, K. L., Randall, N. P., & Haddaway, N. R. (2016). A methodology for systematic mapping in environmental sciences. Environmental Evidence, 5(1), 7. DOI ↗ | Green, B. N., Johnson, C. D., & Adams, A. (2006). Writing narrative literature reviews for peer-reviewed journals: secrets of the trade. Journal of Chiropractic Medicine, 5(3), 101–117. DOI ↗ | Arksey, H., & O'Malley, L. (2005). Scoping studies: towards a methodological framework. International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 8(1), 19–32. DOI ↗ |
| Tên gọi khác | evidence map, systematic map, research map, literature map | traditional review, expert review, unsystematic review, narrative synthesis | scoping study, literature scoping, evidence mapping review, rapid evidence map |
| Liên quan | 6 | 6 | 6 |
| Tóm tắt≠ | A mapping review (also called a systematic map or evidence map) is a form of systematic review that aims to chart the extent, range, and nature of evidence on a broad topic rather than synthesize findings into a single pooled answer. It categorizes studies by key dimensions — such as intervention type, population, outcome, and study design — and presents the resulting landscape visually and tabularly so that researchers and practitioners can identify clusters of evidence, knowledge gaps, and priorities for future primary research or deeper synthesis. | A narrative review is a broad, author-directed synthesis of published literature on a topic, written to summarize, interpret, and contextualize existing knowledge without following the rigorous, pre-registered search and selection protocols that characterize systematic reviews. It draws on the author's expertise to weave disparate sources into a coherent account that identifies themes, debates, and directions for future research. | A scoping review is a systematic evidence-synthesis method that maps the breadth and nature of research on a topic — identifying key concepts, evidence types, and gaps — without necessarily appraising study quality or pooling effect sizes. Developed by Arksey and O'Malley (2005) and refined by Levac and colleagues (2010), it is particularly valuable for emerging or heterogeneous fields where a full systematic review would be premature or infeasible. |
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