The Library's Subject Specialists are happy to help with your literature reviews!
Find your Subject Specialist here.
If you have questions about this guide, contact Librarian Jamie Niehof (jniehof@umich.edu).
A literature review is an overview of the available research for a specific scientific topic.
Literature reviews summarize existing research to answer a review question, provide context for new research, or identify important gaps in the existing body of literature.
An incredible amount of academic literature is published each year, by estimates over two million articles.
Sorting through and reviewing that literature can be complicated, so this Research Guide provides a structured approach to make the process more manageable.
A literature search is a systematic search of the scholarly sources in a particular discipline. A literature review is the analysis, critical evaluation and synthesis of the results of that search. During this process you will move from a review of the literature to a review for your research. Your synthesis of the literature is your unique contribution to research.
— those new to reviewing the literature
— those that need a refresher or a deeper understanding of writing literature reviews
You may need to do a literature review as a part of a course assignment, a capstone project, a master's thesis, a dissertation, or as part of a journal article. No matter the context, a literature review is an essential part of the research process.
A literature review is typically performed for a specific reason. Even when assigned as an assignment, the goal of the literature review will be one or more of the following:
Reviewing the literature helps you understand a research topic and develop your own perspective.