A systematic review is a summary of the medical literature that uses explicit and reproducible methods to systematically search, critically appraise, and synthesize on a specific issue. It synthesizes the results of multiple primary studies related to each other by using strategies that reduce biases and random errors.
A literature review discusses published information in a particular subject area, and sometimes information in a particular subject area within a certain time period. A literature review can be just a simple summary of the sources, but it usually has an organizational pattern and combines both summary and synthesis.
Reception depends on the respective journal selected; advice: check with the editor and look at the specialties of the editorial team. 👍
A systematic review is a type of research study that involves systematically collecting, critically evaluating, and synthesizing the existing evidence on a particular research question or topic (example: Article Hybrid approaches to optimization and machine learning metho...
) On the other hand, a literature review is a broader and more general survey of the existing literature on a particular topic.