Publication:
Artificial intelligence in COVID-19 evidence syntheses was underutilized, but impactful: a methodological study.

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Date

2022-04-28

Authors

Tercero-Hidalgo, Juan R
Khan, Khalid S
Bueno-Cavanillas, Aurora
Fernandez-Lopez, Rodrigo
Huete, Juan F
Amezcua-Prieto, Carmen
Zamora, Javier
Fernandez-Luna, Juan M

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Elsevier Inc.
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Abstract

A rapidly developing scenario like a pandemic requires the prompt production of high-quality systematic reviews, which can be automated using artificial intelligence (AI) techniques. We evaluated the application of AI tools in COVID-19 evidence syntheses. After prospective registration of the review protocol, we automated the download of all open-access COVID-19 systematic reviews in the COVID-19 Living Overview of Evidence database, indexed them for AI-related keywords, and located those that used AI tools. We compared their journals' JCR Impact Factor, citations per month, screening workloads, completion times (from pre-registration to preprint or submission to a journal) and AMSTAR-2 methodology assessments (maximum score 13 points) with a set of publication date matched control reviews without AI. Of the 3,999 COVID-19 reviews, 28 (0.7%, 95% CI 0.47-1.03%) made use of AI. On average, compared to controls (n = 64), AI reviews were published in journals with higher Impact Factors (median 8.9 vs. 3.5, P  AI was an underutilized tool in COVID-19 systematic reviews. Its usage, compared to reviews without AI, was associated with more efficient screening of literature and higher publication impact. There is scope for the application of AI in automating systematic reviews.

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MeSH Terms

Humans
COVID-19
Artificial Intelligence
Prospective Studies
Pandemics
Journal Impact Factor

DeCS Terms

Estudios prospectivos
Factor de impacto de la revista
Humanos
Inteligencia artificial
Pandemias

CIE Terms

Keywords

Artificial intelligence, Automation, Bibliometrics, COVID-19, Research design, Systematic review

Citation

Tercero-Hidalgo JR, Khan KS, Bueno-Cavanillas A, Fernández-López R, Huete JF, Amezcua-Prieto C, et al. Artificial intelligence in COVID-19 evidence syntheses was underutilized, but impactful: a methodological study. J Clin Epidemiol. 2022 Aug;148:124-134.