How to Conduct a Literature Review
A literature review proceeds in six steps: clarify the research question →
develop a search strategy → collect and screen papers → assess quality →
synthesize → write the review. The most important principle is that a
literature review must be a thematic, integrated narrative — not a series of
individual paper summaries.
Why a Literature Review Is Necessary
Failing to survey prior research thoroughly leads to three critical problems. You risk repeating work that has already been done, testing hypotheses that have already been refuted or addressing limitations that have already been overcome, and being unable to demonstrate what is new about your study — a fatal weakness in thesis defenses and journal submissions.
Types of Literature Reviews
The right type depends on your research purpose.
| Type | Purpose | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Narrative review | General overview of a topic | Thesis introductions, broad surveys |
| Systematic review | Comprehensive, reproducible review | Medicine, social sciences |
| Meta-analysis | Statistical synthesis of multiple studies | Combining quantitative research |
| Scoping review | Mapping research scope and evidence | Emerging fields, planning stages |
Six-Step Process
Step 1: Clarify the Research Question
A clear research question is the starting point of every literature review. If the question is vague, your search will be either too broad or too narrow, causing you to miss key sources. Use the PICO framework (Population, Intervention, Comparison, Outcome) to structure the question.
Example: "Among university students (P), does flipped learning (I), compared to traditional lectures (C), affect critical thinking skills (O)?"
Step 2: Develop and Execute a Search Strategy
Keyword selection — Express core concepts in multiple terms. For "online learning," include synonyms like e-learning, distance education, and remote learning.
Boolean operators — Combine AND (all terms), OR (any term), NOT (exclude), "" (exact phrase), and * (wildcard).
Database selection — Use at least three databases.
| Database | Strength |
|---|---|
| Google Scholar | Broad coverage, free |
| PubMed | Biomedical focus |
| Scopus | Strong citation analytics |
| Web of Science | High-quality journal indexing |
| RISS | Domestic theses and journals |
Inclusion and exclusion criteria — Define criteria for publication year, language, study type, and population in advance and document them. Reproducibility is critical in systematic reviews, so always record the search date, query, and result count.
NubintAI's AI Paper Search lets you type a research question in natural language and searches a database of 280 million scholarly works using semantic matching — no exact keywords required.
Step 3: Collect and Screen Papers
Follow the PRISMA flow for four-stage screening.
- Identification — Collect papers through database searches
- Duplicate removal — Remove papers found in multiple databases
- Screening — First-pass filter by title and abstract
- Eligibility assessment — Final selection through full-text review
The Literature Review Agent in deep research mode can search and analyze up to 40 papers simultaneously, organizing key findings, methods, and conclusions in a structured format. This dramatically shortens the screening stage.
Step 4: Assess Quality
Evaluate collected papers against these criteria:
- ☐ Is the research objective clearly stated?
- ☐ Is the research design appropriate for the question?
- ☐ Are the sample size and selection method adequate?
- ☐ Are the validity and reliability of measurement instruments reported?
- ☐ Are the conclusions supported by the results?
- ☐ Are limitations discussed honestly?
Step 5: Synthesize
The most important principle — present a thematic, integrated narrative rather than a series of individual paper summaries.
Bad example: "Kim (2020) found A. Lee (2021) found B. Park (2022) found C."
Good example: "Studies reporting positive effects of online learning (Kim, 2020; Park, 2022) were primarily conducted in asynchronous learning environments, while the study reporting negative outcomes (Lee, 2021) identified a lack of interaction in synchronous settings as the primary cause."
Choose a synthesis approach — by theme, chronology, methodology, or findings — that best fits your research.
The Research Gap Finder categorizes gaps in the existing literature into four types during the synthesis process. This helps you build the logical thread of "synthesis → gap → positioning of the present study."
Step 6: Write the Review
Structure the literature review section as follows: introduction (scope and purpose of the review) → body (organized by theme, highlighting points of consensus, debate, and development) → synthesis discussion (patterns, gaps, implications) → conclusion (summary of key findings, justification for the present study).
NubintAI's AI Editor supports drafting with AI Autocomplete to continue your sentences, and the Citation Finder helps locate missing key references that you can insert directly in the editor.
Common Mistakes
| Mistake | Solution |
|---|---|
| Using only one database | Search at least three |
| Confirmation-biased selection | Deliberately include studies with opposing findings |
| Just listing summaries | Use thematic synthesis to highlight patterns and flows |
| Focusing only on recent papers | Trace citation chains to include foundational works |
| Not documenting the search process | Record search date, query, and result count |
Appropriate Scope for a Literature Review
| Research Level | Recommended Number of Sources |
|---|---|
| Master's thesis | 50–100 |
| Doctoral dissertation | 150–300 |
| Journal article | 30–60 |
| Systematic review | Selected from the entire field |
Summary
A literature review is the most time-consuming part of research, but it also determines the strength of your study's foundation. Thematic synthesis rather than paper-by-paper listing, documented search procedures, and pre-defined inclusion and exclusion criteria are the hallmarks of a strong literature review.