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Repeatability of systematic literature reviews

Kitchenham, B.; Brereton, P.; Li, Zhi; Budgen, D.; Burn, A.

Authors

B. Kitchenham

P. Brereton

Zhi Li

A. Burn



Abstract

Background: One of the anticipated benefits of systematic literature reviews (SLRs) is that they can be conducted in an auditable way to produce repeatable results. Aim: This study aims to identify under what conditions SLRs are likely to be stable, with respect to the primary studies selected, when used in software engineering. The conditions we investigate in this report are when novice researchers undertake searches with a common goal. Method: We undertook a participant-observer multi-case study to investigate the repeatability of systematic literature reviews. The 'cases' in this study were the early stages, involving identification of relevant literature, of two SLRs of unit testing methods. The SLRs were performed independently by two novice researchers. The SLRs were restricted to the ACM and IEEE digital libraries for the years 1986-2005 so their results could be compared with a published expert literature review of unit testing papers. Results: The two SLRs selected very different papers with only six papers out of 32 in common, and both differed substantially from a published secondary study of unit testing papers finding only three of 21 papers. Of the 29 additional papers found by the novice researchers, only 10 were considered relevant. The 10 additional relevant papers would have had an impact on the results of the published study by adding three new categories to the framework and adding papers to three, otherwise empty, cells. Conclusions: In the case of novice researchers, having broadly the same research question will not necessarily guarantee repeatability with respect to primary studies. Systematic reviews must be careful to report their search process fully or they will not be repeatable. Missing papers can have a significant impact on the stability of the results of a secondary study.

Citation

Kitchenham, B., Brereton, P., Li, Z., Budgen, D., & Burn, A. (2011, April). Repeatability of systematic literature reviews. Presented at 15th Annual Conference on Evaluation & Assessment in Software Engineering (EASE 2011), Durham

Presentation Conference Type Conference Paper (published)
Conference Name 15th Annual Conference on Evaluation & Assessment in Software Engineering (EASE 2011)
Start Date Apr 11, 2011
End Date Apr 12, 2011
Online Publication Date Nov 17, 2011
Publication Date Dec 12, 2011
Deposit Date Feb 22, 2025
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 2011
Issue 1
Pages 46-55
DOI https://doi.org/10.1049/ic.2011.0006
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3500698