Evidence Summary
Multidisciplinary Databases Outperform Specialized and Comprehensive
Databases for Agricultural Literature Coverage
A Review of:
Ritchie, S. M., Young, L. M., & Sigman, J.
(2018). A comparison of selected bibliographic database subject overlap for
agricultural information. Issues in
Science and Technology Librarianship, 89. http://doi.org/10.5062/F49Z9340
Reviewed by:
Melissa Goertzen
Consultant and Information Manager
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Email: goertzen.melissa@gmail.com
Received: 1 Mar. 2019 Accepted: 23 Apr.
2019
2019 Goertzen.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative
Commons‐Attribution‐Noncommercial‐Share Alike License 4.0
International (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/),
which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium,
provided the original work is properly attributed, not used for commercial
purposes, and, if transformed, the resulting work is redistributed under the
same or similar license to this one.
DOI: 10.18438/eblip29561
Abstract
Objective – To determine the most
comprehensive database(s) for agricultural literature searching.
Design – Data collection and analysis was conducted using a
modified version of the bibliography method, overlap analysis, chi square
tests, and data visualization methods.
Setting – An academic library in the U.S.
Subjects – Eight commonly used bibliographic databases,
including comprehensive agricultural indexes (AGRICOLA, AGRIS, and CAB
Abstracts), specialized databases (BIOSIS Previews and FSTA), and multidisciplinary
databases (Google Scholar, Scopus, and Web of Science).
Methods – The researchers selected three review articles that
represented sub-topics within the field of agriculture. Sources listed in the
bibliographies of the three review articles were used to build a bibliographic
citation set for analysis.
Using a modified version of the bibliography method,
90 citations were randomly selected from the above-mentioned citation set.
Researchers then turned to the 8 selected databases and searched for all 90
citations in each platform. Search queries were crafted
in two ways: unique title strings in quotation marks and combinations of terms
entered into the “title”, “keyword”, “journal source”, and “author” fields.
Citations were considered to be covered in a database if the full bibliographic
record was located using the above-mentioned search strategy.
Next, chi square tests were used to evaluate if the
expected number of citations from the sample group were found in each database
or if the frequency differed between the eight databases. The overlap analysis
method provided numerical representation of the degree of similarity and
difference across the eight databases. Finally, data visualizations created in
Excel and Gephi enhanced comparisons between the
eight databases and highlighted differences that were not obvious based solely
on the analysis of numerical data.
Main Results – Researchers found that comprehensive databases
(AGRICOLA, AGRIS, and CAB Abstracts) were not in fact comprehensive in their
coverage of agricultural literature. However, the results suggested that CAB
Abstracts was more comprehensive than AGRICOLA or AGRIS, particularly in regard to its coverage of the sub-topics “agronomy” and
“meat sciences”. However, coverage of the sub-topic “sustainable diets” lagged
behind multidisciplinary databases, which may be explained
by the fact that the topic is interdisciplinary in nature. The superior
coverage of CAB Abstracts over other comprehensive databases is consistent with
findings reported by Kawasaki (2004).
The analysis of specialized databases (BIOSIS Previews
and FSTA) suggested that citations within the scope of the database were
covered very well, while those out of scope were not. For instance, the
sub-topics “sustainable diets” and “meat science” are out of scope of the
biological sciences and thus, were not well covered in BIOSIS.
The multidisciplinary databases (Google Scholar,
Scopus and Web of Science) provided the most comprehensive coverage
agricultural literature. All three databases covered most citations included in
the data set. However, researchers noted that all three databases provided weak
coverage of trade published items, books, or older journals.
Conclusion – The study found that multidisciplinary databases
provide close to full coverage of agricultural literature. In addition, they
provide the best access to content that is interdisciplinary in nature.
Specialized and comprehensive databases are recommended when research topics
are within the scope of the database. Also, they best support in-depth projects
such as bibliographies or comprehensive review articles.
Commentary
In the current information landscape, academic
librarians are called upon to find innovative ways to do more with less. It is essential
that librarians understand the value of information resources and how they
support research and learning activities.
The paper under review discusses a sustainable
methodology that academic librarians can utilize to analyze database content.
Specifically, it provides an effective strategy to identify areas of
information coverage and overlap, determine the strengths and limitations of
database content, and promote discovery of literature in a specific field of
study. At the same time, the methodology allows for the standardized comparison
of databases, which feeds into the notion of evidence-based collection
development. The results of the comparison can easily provide a baseline for
future evaluations that inform decisions regarding the renewal or cancellation
of information products. The results also build on a previous study by Kawasaki
(2004) and provide insight into how the information landscape in the field of
agriculture has evolved over the past 15 years.
The reviewer evaluated the paper using the “Evaluation
Tool for Bibliometric Studies” (Perryman, 2009). The strength of the piece is
in its clarity of language, organization, and detailed descriptions of the
methodology and data analysis activities. The discussions of how citations were
collected, the strengths and limitations of statistical data, and the ways that
data visualization tools fill knowledge gaps present in numerical data provide
a roadmap for other information professionals wishing to examine content
coverage. The researchers also demonstrate how study findings enhance knowledge
of the collection. For instance, it was determined that because of the broad
content coverage in multidisciplinary databases, many researchers do not
require specialized or comprehensive databases to complete projects; these
sources are better suited to in-depth topics that are well within the scope of
the databases’ subject focus.
One limitation of the paper is its focus on numerical
data. It would have been interesting to learn if researchers primarily use
multidisciplinary databases because of the extensive content coverage or
whether they prefer to use specialized or comprehensive databases due to their
focus on specific subject areas. Essentially, a discussion of this nature would
have provided insight into whether library users value databases because of
their content coverage or if there are other factors involved, such as the
functionality of a database. However, the researchers do acknowledge this
limitation and state that there is value in conducting a future study that
examines how library users search for content in databases.
Overall, the researchers present a strong study that
provides value to academic librarians working in the area of collection
development. The paper presents a low-cost and sustainable methodology that
promotes standardized database evaluations at institutions. It would be
interesting to read future studies about how this methodology supports
evidence-based collection development decisions at other institutions.
References
Kawasaki, J. L. (2004). Agriculture journal literature indexed in life
sciences databases. Issues in Science
& Technology Librarianship 40. https://doi.org/10.5062/F4M61H61
Perryman, C. (2009). Evaluation
Tool for Bibliometric Studies. Retrieved 20 March 2019 from http://libjournalclub.pbworks.com/f/Journal%20Club%20Jan%2020%202011.pdf
Ritchie, S. M., Young, L. M., & Sigman, J.
(2018). A comparison of selected bibliographic database subject overlap for
agricultural information. Issues in
Science and Technology Librarianship, 89. https://doi.org/10.5062/F49Z9340