Reproducibility and Data Storage for Active Learning-Aided Systematic Reviews

Author:

Lombaers Peter12,de Bruin Jonathan3ORCID,van de Schoot Rens1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Methodology and Statistics, Faculty of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Utrecht University, 3584 CS Utrecht, The Netherlands

2. IDfuse, 3526 KS Utrecht, The Netherlands

3. Department of Research and Data Management Services, Information Technology Services, Utrecht University, 3584 CS Utrecht, The Netherlands

Abstract

In the screening phase of a systematic review, screening prioritization via active learning effectively reduces the workload. However, the PRISMA guidelines are not sufficient for reporting the screening phase in a reproducible manner. Text screening with active learning is an iterative process, but the labeling decisions and the training of the active learning model can happen independently of each other in time. Therefore, it is not trivial to store the data from both events so that one can still know which iteration of the model was used for each labeling decision. Moreover, many iterations of the active learning model will be trained throughout the screening process, producing an enormous amount of data (think of many gigabytes or even terabytes of data), and machine learning models are continually becoming larger. This article clarifies the steps in an active learning-aided screening process and what data is produced at every step. We consider what reproducibility means in this context and we show that there is tension between the desire to be reproducible and the amount of data that is stored. Finally, we present the RDAL Checklist (Reproducibility and Data storage for Active Learning-Aided Systematic Reviews Checklist), which helps users and creators of active learning software make their screening process reproducible.

Funder

European Commission

Dutch Research Council

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference50 articles.

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