Sentences with phrase «as grey literature»

Finally, the inclusion criteria for this review means some potential articles may have been excluded, such as grey literature and studies published in languages other than English.
Peer - reviewed, published literature will be searched as well as grey literature.

Not exact matches

Each artist's file contains materials ranging from books, collaterals, photographs, and videos to grey literature, donated to the Centre by the Artists - in - Residence, as well as Singaporean artists outside our Residency Programme.
What I said was «As authors, we had to report only the best available science (inclusive of a select few grey literatures as per the rules of procedure) which is «policy - relevant and yet policy - neutral» and that's what we collectively did while writing the Asia ChapteAs authors, we had to report only the best available science (inclusive of a select few grey literatures as per the rules of procedure) which is «policy - relevant and yet policy - neutral» and that's what we collectively did while writing the Asia Chapteas per the rules of procedure) which is «policy - relevant and yet policy - neutral» and that's what we collectively did while writing the Asia Chapter.
The 2007 report used a non-peer-reviewed study produced by an NGO — known as «grey literature» — to erroneously project that 80 percent of the Himalayan glacier area would very likely have melted by 2035.
The BT approach uses values estimated from existing studies that are published in academic or grey literature as an approximation for valuing environmental services and social welfare of carbon offset projects.
4) IPCC needs to stop citing grey literature such as WWF and Greenpeace reports with untraceable «data».
As we've seen over the last couple of years, many of the more outlandish and alarmist claims in the IPCC reports have been based not on peer - reviewed science, but on «grey literature» — the propaganda sheets and press releases distributed by fanatical green NGOs (many of which are part - funded by the European Commission — but that's another story).
As DC pointed out, the published literature and the blogosphere have already responded, more than adequately in most people's minds who have actually read the various white and grey literature responses to his critiques, and then subsequently understood them.
Haven't heard about all the «grey literature» which your noble IPCC accepts as «peer - reviewed» huh?
On the other hand, the IPCC rules explicitly allow grey literature but with a requirement that it should be labeled as such and that it should be quality checked.
Neither is BEST a review of the hockey stick data, just the earth surface temps according to weather station sighting, rather than proxies, and yet the BBC have claimed that this non-peer review grey literature (as it is at this time) is conclusive proof of ALL AGW alarmist claims.
Some of the «grey literature» discussed, such as Soon and Baliuans and Wegman, falls squarely into the contrarian canon.
«A citizens audit of the IPCC study found that 5,587 cited references, nearly a third of all sources, were not peer - reviewed publications, but rather «grey literature,» such as press releases, newspaper and magazine articles, discussion papers, masters and PhD theses, working papers and advocacy literature published by environmental groups,» Sensenbrenner said.
The accuracy of much of the PR firms to date has been very accurate to date as we have seen by the recent IPCC grey literature meltdown and the corruption revealed in climategate.
I have nothing much against the use of «grey literature» (or — I might as well come clean all at once — the precautionary principle, a revenue - neutral carbon tax and opposition to consumerism and overpopulation) but it's got to be solid «grey literature» — Agoumi wasn't — and you've got it to paraphrase it accurately — the IPCC didn't and still hasn't.
If it can't cope with the problem of grey literature, and will be including more of it, as Pearce suggests may be the case, maybe it should just admit to being political, not a scientific organisation.
[Pachauri] said the media and other sections of society had misunderstood the role of such information, labelling it grey literature, «as if it was some form of grey muddied water flowing down the drains».
While other national libraries may continue to add the majority of traditional grey literature types to their collections, CISTI has moved in many cases to a just - in - time model of document supply for such document types as standards, patents and theses.
As an introduction to my comments on collecting grey literature, I need to return to Kathryn Arbuckle's question of how much staff time grey literature is worth to your institution.
But in this age of the electronic resource, for those of us who work in the NRC Information Centres directly with researchers, often its just as easy and as much fun for us to find that piece of grey literature ourselves than to send the order in to our Document Delivery group.
Walt Crawford, an engaging and controversial voice in the library world, has just released an article characterizing blogs and other forms of grey literature as «the most compelling and worthwhile literature in the library field today.»
The digital archive collection of the Harvard Law School Library includes selected Harvard Law School publications, government documents (both U.S. and foreign), and secondary legal and law - related sources, such as reports and studies from organizations, scholarly societies, and other types of grey literature.
I also am no expert on grey literature, but I think due to the difficulty in categorizing (and finding) it (especially for law - related GL), and due to its relative importance, I wonder if this as a small example that illustrates the important role that MLS / MISt / MIS - trained librarians can play (compared to a non-trained information seeker).
Analysis & Policy Observatory (also known as APO) is a not - for - profit open access subject repository or digital library, specialising in public policy and practice grey literature and journal articles, mainly from Australia and New Zealand, with some coverage of other countries.
The study did not include «grey literature» such as government and non-government organisation reports, books, and websites.
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