352 F. Shull and R.L. Feldmann by practitioners. This can be mitigated by applying additional effort aimed at creating multiple reports
for different audiences, particularly by abstracting actionable guidelines for practitioners from the research (see for example
Koyani et al., 2003).
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Openness: +The amount of detail that is required to be documented and included in the final report of results makes this a very open process. In fact, peer review of each step of the process is called for to ensure quality and rigor in the results.
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Cost: Researchers have pointed out that systematic review is effort-intensive and hence high cost Systematic reviews require considerably more effort than traditional reviews (Kitchenham, 2004). Part of this cost is due to the fact that this approach requires extensive and lengthy documentation. It is moreover not well suited for application
by a single researcher, since a best practice is to use at least two researchers to minimize biases. Although we could find no comprehensive estimate of costs for performing systematic reviews, anecdotally we did hear from researchers who expressed some concern about their expensive nature in comparison to the benefits received. One researcher questioned the wisdom of adopting such techniques from the medical field, which has a research budget many times that of the budget for software engineering.
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