Bubble effect: including internet search engines in systematic reviews introduces selection bias and impedes scientific reproducibility

Abstract Background Using internet search engines (such as Google search) in systematic literature reviews is increasingly becoming a ubiquitous part of search methodology. In order to integrate the vast quantity of available knowledge, literature mostly focuses on systematic reviews, considered to...

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Main Authors: Marko Ćurković, Andro Košec
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-11-01
Series:BMC Medical Research Methodology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12874-018-0599-2
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spelling doaj-bf5beac31a3940a18a9cfe493cd0e5a02020-11-25T02:07:40ZengBMCBMC Medical Research Methodology1471-22882018-11-011811310.1186/s12874-018-0599-2Bubble effect: including internet search engines in systematic reviews introduces selection bias and impedes scientific reproducibilityMarko Ćurković0Andro Košec1University Psychiatric Hospital VrapčeDepartment of Otorhinolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery, University Hospital Center Sestre milosrdniceAbstract Background Using internet search engines (such as Google search) in systematic literature reviews is increasingly becoming a ubiquitous part of search methodology. In order to integrate the vast quantity of available knowledge, literature mostly focuses on systematic reviews, considered to be principal sources of scientific evidence at all practical levels. Any possible individual methodological flaws present in these systematic reviews have the potential to become systemic. Main text This particular bias, that could be referred to as (re)search bubble effect, is introduced because of inherent, personalized nature of internet search engines that tailors results according to derived user preferences based on unreproducible criteria. In other words, internet search engines adjust their user’s beliefs and attitudes, leading to the creation of a personalized (re)search bubble, including entries that have not been subjected to rigorous peer review process. The internet search engine algorithms are in a state of constant flux, producing differing results at any given moment, even if the query remains identical. There are many more subtle ways of introducing unwanted variations and synonyms of search queries that are used autonomously, detached from user insight and intent. Even the most well-known and respected systematic literature reviews do not seem immune to the negative implications of the search bubble effect, affecting reproducibility. Conclusion Although immensely useful and justified by the need for encompassing the entirety of knowledge, the practice of including internet search engines in systematic literature reviews is fundamentally irreconcilable with recent emphasis on scientific reproducibility and rigor, having a profound impact on the discussion of the limits of scientific epistemology. Scientific research that is not reproducible, may still be called science, but represents one that should be avoided. Our recommendation is to use internet search engines as an additional literature source, primarily in order to validate initial search strategies centered on bibliographic databases.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12874-018-0599-2Literature searchesReportingWeb searchingResearch ethicsScientific rigor
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marko Ćurković
Andro Košec
spellingShingle Marko Ćurković
Andro Košec
Bubble effect: including internet search engines in systematic reviews introduces selection bias and impedes scientific reproducibility
BMC Medical Research Methodology
Literature searches
Reporting
Web searching
Research ethics
Scientific rigor
author_facet Marko Ćurković
Andro Košec
author_sort Marko Ćurković
title Bubble effect: including internet search engines in systematic reviews introduces selection bias and impedes scientific reproducibility
title_short Bubble effect: including internet search engines in systematic reviews introduces selection bias and impedes scientific reproducibility
title_full Bubble effect: including internet search engines in systematic reviews introduces selection bias and impedes scientific reproducibility
title_fullStr Bubble effect: including internet search engines in systematic reviews introduces selection bias and impedes scientific reproducibility
title_full_unstemmed Bubble effect: including internet search engines in systematic reviews introduces selection bias and impedes scientific reproducibility
title_sort bubble effect: including internet search engines in systematic reviews introduces selection bias and impedes scientific reproducibility
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Research Methodology
issn 1471-2288
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Abstract Background Using internet search engines (such as Google search) in systematic literature reviews is increasingly becoming a ubiquitous part of search methodology. In order to integrate the vast quantity of available knowledge, literature mostly focuses on systematic reviews, considered to be principal sources of scientific evidence at all practical levels. Any possible individual methodological flaws present in these systematic reviews have the potential to become systemic. Main text This particular bias, that could be referred to as (re)search bubble effect, is introduced because of inherent, personalized nature of internet search engines that tailors results according to derived user preferences based on unreproducible criteria. In other words, internet search engines adjust their user’s beliefs and attitudes, leading to the creation of a personalized (re)search bubble, including entries that have not been subjected to rigorous peer review process. The internet search engine algorithms are in a state of constant flux, producing differing results at any given moment, even if the query remains identical. There are many more subtle ways of introducing unwanted variations and synonyms of search queries that are used autonomously, detached from user insight and intent. Even the most well-known and respected systematic literature reviews do not seem immune to the negative implications of the search bubble effect, affecting reproducibility. Conclusion Although immensely useful and justified by the need for encompassing the entirety of knowledge, the practice of including internet search engines in systematic literature reviews is fundamentally irreconcilable with recent emphasis on scientific reproducibility and rigor, having a profound impact on the discussion of the limits of scientific epistemology. Scientific research that is not reproducible, may still be called science, but represents one that should be avoided. Our recommendation is to use internet search engines as an additional literature source, primarily in order to validate initial search strategies centered on bibliographic databases.
topic Literature searches
Reporting
Web searching
Research ethics
Scientific rigor
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12874-018-0599-2
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