H. Hammady - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

H. Hammady

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Papers by H. Hammady

Research paper thumbnail of Rayyan: a systematic reviews web app for exploring and filtering searches for eligible studies for Cochrane Reviews

Background: Preliminary filtering of searches is one of the most time consuming aspects of syste... more Background:

Preliminary filtering of searches is one of the most time consuming aspects of systematic reviewing. Cochrane Review authors use a variety of approaches (manual and electronic) but no single method satisfactorily fulfills the principal requirements of speed with accuracy.

Objectives:

Pilot testing of Rayyan (rayyan.qcri.org) focused on usability and assessment of how accurately the tool performed against manual methods, and evaluation of the added benefit of the prediction feature.

Methods:

Searches from two published Cochrane Reviews (1030 and 273 records, respectively) were used to test the app (December 2013 to March 2014). Included studies had been previously selected manually for the reviews; original searches were uploaded into Rayyan.

Results:

One recently updated Cochrane Review (273 records) was used as a taster, allowing a quick overview of the look and feel of Rayyan and for early feedback on usability to be addressed by the developers. The second Cochrane Review (1030 records) required several iterations to identify the 11 trials that had previously been selected manually. The suggestions and hints, based on the prediction rules, appeared as the testing progressed beyond five included studies. The selection process was responsive and effective; the options undecided / included / excluded / suggested were clearly displayed. Search functions included limiters relevance / title / date. Innovative features include: word clouds as graphical indicators of key terms; translation option linked to Google Translate to enable a quick translation or forwarding to a translator; similarity-based exploration of studies; labelling of studies, including reasons for exclusion. Key functionality includes the unambiguous way in which studies could be viewed in context together with the completed selections, and how undecided studies could be fed back into the system and were then highlighted as hint.

Conclusion:

Rayyan (beta-testing phase) is responsive, and largely intuitive to use, with a significant potential to lighten the load of review authors by speeding up this tedious part of the process.

Research paper thumbnail of AllegatorTrack: Combining and Reporting Results of Truth Discovery from Multi-source Data

Proceedigns of 2015 IEEE 31st International Conference on Data Engineering (ICDE), April 2015 pages 1440 - 1443

Research paper thumbnail of Data Science at QCRI

Research paper thumbnail of Data Science at QCRI

Research paper thumbnail of Design and analysis of new generation protocols for triple-play networks

Qatar Foundation Annual Research Forum Proceedings, 2010

Research paper thumbnail of An HMM system for recognizing articulation features for Arabic phones

2008 International Conference on Computer Engineering & Systems, 2008

Research paper thumbnail of Rayyan: a systematic reviews web app for exploring and filtering searches for eligible studies for Cochrane Reviews

Background: Preliminary filtering of searches is one of the most time consuming aspects of syste... more Background:

Preliminary filtering of searches is one of the most time consuming aspects of systematic reviewing. Cochrane Review authors use a variety of approaches (manual and electronic) but no single method satisfactorily fulfills the principal requirements of speed with accuracy.

Objectives:

Pilot testing of Rayyan (rayyan.qcri.org) focused on usability and assessment of how accurately the tool performed against manual methods, and evaluation of the added benefit of the prediction feature.

Methods:

Searches from two published Cochrane Reviews (1030 and 273 records, respectively) were used to test the app (December 2013 to March 2014). Included studies had been previously selected manually for the reviews; original searches were uploaded into Rayyan.

Results:

One recently updated Cochrane Review (273 records) was used as a taster, allowing a quick overview of the look and feel of Rayyan and for early feedback on usability to be addressed by the developers. The second Cochrane Review (1030 records) required several iterations to identify the 11 trials that had previously been selected manually. The suggestions and hints, based on the prediction rules, appeared as the testing progressed beyond five included studies. The selection process was responsive and effective; the options undecided / included / excluded / suggested were clearly displayed. Search functions included limiters relevance / title / date. Innovative features include: word clouds as graphical indicators of key terms; translation option linked to Google Translate to enable a quick translation or forwarding to a translator; similarity-based exploration of studies; labelling of studies, including reasons for exclusion. Key functionality includes the unambiguous way in which studies could be viewed in context together with the completed selections, and how undecided studies could be fed back into the system and were then highlighted as hint.

Conclusion:

Rayyan (beta-testing phase) is responsive, and largely intuitive to use, with a significant potential to lighten the load of review authors by speeding up this tedious part of the process.

Research paper thumbnail of AllegatorTrack: Combining and Reporting Results of Truth Discovery from Multi-source Data

Proceedigns of 2015 IEEE 31st International Conference on Data Engineering (ICDE), April 2015 pages 1440 - 1443

Research paper thumbnail of Data Science at QCRI

Research paper thumbnail of Data Science at QCRI

Research paper thumbnail of Design and analysis of new generation protocols for triple-play networks

Qatar Foundation Annual Research Forum Proceedings, 2010

Research paper thumbnail of An HMM system for recognizing articulation features for Arabic phones

2008 International Conference on Computer Engineering & Systems, 2008

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