Term: meta-nalysis
Literally
meaning: “breaking up or study after”
Origin: Anc Greek
μετά-/meta-(=compining
form meaning after, next
to, behind)
ανάλυσις/analysis(=to breaking up of any whole into its
parts)>verb αναλύω/analeo
>ανά- /ana-(= combining form meaning upon, throughout) + λύω/leo(to break up, to solve)
Coined/History
The first meta-analysis was performed in 1904 by Karl Pearson when he was asked by the British
government to review evidence on the effects of a vaccine against typhoid. The term was coined in 1976 by American
statistician Gene Glass in his presidential address to the American Educational
Research Association (AERA) : “ … the analysis of the results of statistical analysis for the purpose
of drawing general conclusions”. One
of the first meta-analysis published
was on the effect of class size on educational achievement (Glass and Smith, 1979).
Source:
Simpson, R; Pearson, K (1904). "Report On Certain
Enteric Fever Inoculation Statistics". The British
Medical Journal(BMJ
Publishing Group) 2 (2288): 1243–1246. JSTOR 20282622. PMC 2355479. PMID 20761760.
Glass G. V (1976). "Primary, secondary, and
meta-analysis of research". Educational Researcher 5: 3–8.
Definition
Μετα-analysis is the statistical
methods of combining evidence from different studies in order to obtain a
quantitative estimate of the overall effect of a particular innervation or
treatment. In other words
meta-analysis is the systematic approach for integrating the outcomes of a set
of studies.
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