Unlock the secrets to crafting a standout literature review with AI: Discover NEXT LEVEL tactics in this must-watch guide: ruclips.net/video/wz8lg_3j3Ok/видео.html
Top of the pile - Excelent tips! I'm trying to improve my literature review and your videos have helped me a lot! Thanks so much! I write from Brazil and soon I plan to be in Newcastle with my research on technical cooperation;
MAJOR HACK: If you actually have to do searching for a systematic review the best tool you have access to is - a librarian. Literally. We're like deep neural networks who've been trained on systematic searching for years and years, you can ask us questions, we'll chat with you, online if you like, we'll get trained up on your topic real quick, you'll have publishable search strategies in the quickest time possible. This channel is great, AI is great, but if REALLY HAVE TO DO AN SR just chat to a librarian
Thanks Andy, big fan of your work! Do you have any suggestions/tools to analyse my existing knowledge base (which I organised via sections/headings in a word doc over many years)? I’ve tried uploading this to GPT-4 and then ask it to summarise a given aspect of the doc (eg which studies have measured construct X), but it doesn’t do a very good job. Thanks!
Have you tried Docanalyzer.ai? You could maybe upload the sections in individual files and then label them all the same label to ask against all of the sections.
I dislike using google scholar for doing the article search as it is not repeatable. There is some variability to the search results, whereas the paper databases like EmBase, Web of Science, etc have repeatable searches. One of the major points in a systematic review in my opinion is to show that you have a repeatable method that you used to gather all of the information on the particular topic that you chose and google scholar can't do that. I do use google scholar to double check my papers returned from the databases to make sure that it doesn't return any that I may have missed.
Would love you hear your thoughts on something I've never heard of, nor expected to need to do in a undergrad degree (IT), and that is "A Survey" - is it a non-systematic literature review and is that the bare bones distinction or is it something else special? Ironically, in the only applied AI unit my school offers so far, we're being instructed to write "A Survey" for a tier 2 unit because there is this nascent preconception that just a case study or other research report would be too simple to plagiarize with AI capabilities as they are. I think your existing resources are going to be a great help thank you!
Hi @DrAndyStapleton I am just starting my masters in the educational sector, loving your videos, i find them very helpful. Can you recommend an ai platform that i can use to rewrite my draft introduction into a more powerful academic introduction? Its currently at around 2800 words and i need it to be around 1200 words,😊. Thanks
If you use a tool like Rayyan (there's a free version available) or Covidence (many institutional libraries subscribe), the PRISMA chart will be made as you screen using the tool.
I bought Hey GPT following your suggestion a while ago but it seems like it is a non-evolving scam that is not going anywhere. Do you know what they are up to?
Of course if you follow the PRISMA checklist, there's more to do, but for finding the papers, I think there's no issue mentioning how you searched for articles using Google scholar, elicit etc, as many academic institutions are using it, like rayann. Im undergrad, the instructions weren't clear to me, and the rubric kept changing.
Unlock the secrets to crafting a standout literature review with AI: Discover NEXT LEVEL tactics in this must-watch guide: ruclips.net/video/wz8lg_3j3Ok/видео.html
I just found your channel. Thank you for sharing, very useful. I did PhD many years ago and failed. I'm starting it again. Wish me luck this time.
Top of the pile - Excelent tips! I'm trying to improve my literature review and your videos have helped me a lot! Thanks so much! I write from Brazil and soon I plan to be in Newcastle with my research on technical cooperation;
MAJOR HACK: If you actually have to do searching for a systematic review the best tool you have access to is - a librarian. Literally. We're like deep neural networks who've been trained on systematic searching for years and years, you can ask us questions, we'll chat with you, online if you like, we'll get trained up on your topic real quick, you'll have publishable search strategies in the quickest time possible. This channel is great, AI is great, but if REALLY HAVE TO DO AN SR just chat to a librarian
Yes!! The searching in this video is certainly NOT systematic. Librarians can fix that!
@@Johanna.EG. then you are using biological neural network IAs...
Can you please let us know which prog. Are free and which are not?
We are poor bankrupt students😂
ChatGPT 3.5 is FREE
ChatGPT 4.0 is NOT FREE
Google Gemini is FREE
Google Gemini+ is NOT FREE
haaa true
@@nawrasbalkan6911
Exactly
Do you have a text to support your video on doing a "systematic literature review."?
awesome sharing Doc. Really appreciate it
Thanks Andy, big fan of your work!
Do you have any suggestions/tools to analyse my existing knowledge base (which I organised via sections/headings in a word doc over many years)? I’ve tried uploading this to GPT-4 and then ask it to summarise a given aspect of the doc (eg which studies have measured construct X), but it doesn’t do a very good job. Thanks!
Have you tried Docanalyzer.ai? You could maybe upload the sections in individual files and then label them all the same label to ask against all of the sections.
@@DrAndyStapleton I haven't - only first saw its finer features in this latest video of yours! It's a good suggestion - will look into it. Thanks!!
yayyyy another video.. im hooked
I dislike using google scholar for doing the article search as it is not repeatable. There is some variability to the search results, whereas the paper databases like EmBase, Web of Science, etc have repeatable searches. One of the major points in a systematic review in my opinion is to show that you have a repeatable method that you used to gather all of the information on the particular topic that you chose and google scholar can't do that. I do use google scholar to double check my papers returned from the databases to make sure that it doesn't return any that I may have missed.
Posted on the Fools day? 😂Good morning Andy.
Would love you hear your thoughts on something I've never heard of, nor expected to need to do in a undergrad degree (IT), and that is "A Survey" - is it a non-systematic literature review and is that the bare bones distinction or is it something else special?
Ironically, in the only applied AI unit my school offers so far, we're being instructed to write "A Survey" for a tier 2 unit because there is this nascent preconception that just a case study or other research report would be too simple to plagiarize with AI capabilities as they are.
I think your existing resources are going to be a great help thank you!
This is amazing thank you!
Hi @DrAndyStapleton I am just starting my masters in the educational sector, loving your videos, i find them very helpful. Can you recommend an ai platform that i can use to rewrite my draft introduction into a more powerful academic introduction? Its currently at around 2800 words and i need it to be around 1200 words,😊. Thanks
New to this channel...thank you for all the tips to improve my litt review, and cool beard!
where do I get the tshirt?
Hello sir... can you do a scoping review please...
Love the shirt!
I need to know where you got that shirt
Love the videos ty ❤❤❤
Is DocuAI any good in your view?
Was the work necessary to fill out the Prisma flowchart done manually or with AI ?
That was a manual process
If you use a tool like Rayyan (there's a free version available) or Covidence (many institutional libraries subscribe), the PRISMA chart will be made as you screen using the tool.
Thank you for sharing such an entertaining and amusing video. It's wonderful to be able to laugh and learn simultaneously. You are amazing!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Thanks, like it!
I tried to use the library function for ask all the pdf together in one question but it always showing me error..
Any AI tools to assist with SPSS?
Often these review articles use a paywalled database like scopus or webscience...Are there any good alternatives to them? I dont have access to them.
My writing is not that good and can't write in coherent and interpret. What ai could help me to make my writing more clear and help me in interpret l
@DrAndyStapleton is the real OG!
LOL !!! you made my day!!!
Scispace the best
I bought Hey GPT following your suggestion a while ago but it seems like it is a non-evolving scam that is not going anywhere. Do you know what they are up to?
Try instead AnythingLLM
Nice video but this is not the way you really do systematic reviews so it can be misleading
Please enlighten us
@@gianluca.pastorelli And also this channel www.youtube.com/@carrieprice78/videos
Of course if you follow the PRISMA checklist, there's more to do, but for finding the papers, I think there's no issue mentioning how you searched for articles using Google scholar, elicit etc, as many academic institutions are using it, like rayann.
Im undergrad, the instructions weren't clear to me, and the rubric kept changing.
Yes I worry that people might think that they could watch this video and do a real SR. An SR is a proper piece of research, not an assignment
Seriously. This video will just lead to more junk systematic reviews being written.
You funny man....
Also, you have the mildest aussie accent I have ever heard... refreshing...