Pearson and AccessEd: Literature Review
Summary
TLDR本视频深入讲解了如何进行文献综述和寻找可靠来源。首先阐明了文献综述的定义和重要性,接着介绍了文献综述的类型和评估来源可靠性的方法。视频还详细阐述了进行文献综述的五个步骤:搜索相关文献、分析来源、识别主题和话题、组织结构以及撰写文献综述。通过实例和建议,视频旨在帮助观众有效规划和撰写文献综述,为研究项目或论文提供坚实的基础。
Takeaways
- 📚 文献综述是对你的研究项目相关标题或问题的研究和数据的概述。
- 🔍 文献综述的目的是总结、分析和评估已有的研究,识别相关理论、方法和研究中的空白。
- 🚫 避免仅列举文献或书籍,而是要理解和传达源材料的内容。
- 🔑 进行文献综述的五个步骤:搜索相关文献、分析来源、识别主题、组织结构和撰写文献综述。
- 🔎 寻找文献时,区分主要文献和次要文献,次要文献更适合文献综述。
- 🏢 在线查找文献时,确保使用关键词,并通过学术期刊、图书馆目录等途径寻找。
- 🔍 评估文献时,考虑作者权威性、准确性、偏见和时效性。
- 📈 通过表格工具收集和整理文献笔记,帮助识别主题、辩论、关键出版物和文献中的空白。
- 📊 根据日期、主题或方法组织文献,以形成清晰的文献综述结构。
- ✍️ 文献综述应包含引言、主体和结论,确保每个部分都有清晰的结构和目的。
- 📝 写作时,总结和综合主要观点,分析和解释发现的意义,并批判性地评估来源。
Q & A
文献综述的目的是什么?
-文献综述的目的是描述与研究项目标题或研究问题相关的先前研究和数据,总结、分析和评估已有的研究,为读者提供该主题的知识概览,识别相关理论、方法和现有研究中的空白,并以有组织的方式呈现这些研究,明确回应研究项目标题、问题或挑战。
文献综述不应该包含哪些内容?
-文献综述不应该只是书籍、文章或其他文献资源的描述性列表或总结,也不应该是关于所写主题的一切内容的详尽书目,同时,它不应该包含作者自己的论点和想法,这些应包含在论文的讨论部分。
进行文献综述的五个步骤是什么?
-进行文献综述的五个步骤包括:1. 搜索与主题相关的文献和来源;2. 分析将要使用的来源;3. 识别文献来源中的主要主题和话题;4. 理解如何结构化文献综述,并为此制定大纲;5. 撰写文献综述。
如何判断文献来源是否可信?
-判断文献来源是否可信时,需要考虑作者权威性、信息准确性、内容偏见以及文献的时效性。
在搜索文献来源时,有哪些有效途径?
-搜索文献来源时,可以通过大学图书馆目录、谷歌学术、在线学术期刊和文章、公开可访问的研究摘要等途径。
如何分析和评估找到的文献来源?
-分析和评估文献来源时,需要考虑作者身份、作者试图解决的问题、主要论点、关键概念、发现和结论、支持结论的证据、研究的优势和劣势以及出版物如何与领域内的其他文献相关。
在识别文献综述中的主要主题和话题时,应该注意什么?
-识别主要主题和话题时,应该关注文献中反复出现的问题或概念、不同来源之间的辩论和冲突、领域内具有影响力的理论或研究,以及文献中缺失的内容。
文献综述的结构化和组织有哪些方法?
-文献综述的结构化和组织可以按照时间顺序、主题或使用的方法进行。
撰写文献综述时,如何构建引言、主体和结论?
-引言应明确概述文献综述的焦点和目的;主体部分应根据主题、时间段或方法进行划分,并使用子标题;结论应总结文献中的关键发现,并强调其对研究问题的重要性。
进行文献综述时,有哪些最终提示?
-进行文献综述时,应提前规划、保持分析性、清晰地呈现信息、跟踪来源,并确保来源的可信度。
如何进一步实践和提高文献综述的技能?
-可以使用视频中提供的5步计划来规划文献综述过程,找到与研究问题相关的3个来源,练习评估它们,并使用视频中的表格识别主题、空白和辩论。
文献综述的主体部分应如何分段?
-根据主题、时间段或方法使用子标题来分段主体部分,并确保段落结构清晰、逻辑连贯。
Outlines
📚 文献综述与寻找可靠来源
本视频介绍了如何进行文献综述以及如何找到值得信赖的文献来源。主要内容包括:文献综述的定义、撰写文献综述的原因、文献综述的类型、如何识别可靠的文献来源、进行文献综述的五个步骤以及如何组织和撰写文献综述。
🔍 搜索相关文献与来源
这一部分详细阐述了如何搜索与研究主题相关的文献和来源。介绍了文献的不同类型,包括原始文献和二手文献,并讨论了如何使用关键词在不同平台上进行文献搜索。同时,提供了一些寻找和评估文献来源的实用技巧。
🏛️ 评估文献来源的可靠性
这部分内容强调了在进行文献综述时,如何评估所找到的文献来源的可靠性。提出了一系列问题来帮助判断文献的权威性、准确性、偏见和时效性。同时,讨论了如何辨别网络上的各种信息来源的可信度。
📊 识别主题、辩论、论点和文献中的空白
在这一部分中,讲解了如何从收集到的文献中识别主要的主题、辩论、论点和研究空白。提供了一种表格工具来帮助整理和记录文献信息,以及如何根据这些信息来组织文献综述的结构。
📝 组织和结构化你的文献综述
这部分内容介绍了如何根据主题、时间顺序或研究方法来组织和结构化文献综述。强调了在写作文献综述之前,对文献进行分组和结构化的重要性,并提供了如何制定文献综述大纲的具体步骤。
✍️ 撰写你的文献综述
最后一部分详细介绍了撰写文献综述的过程,包括文献综述的引言、主体和结论的写作方法。提供了如何总结和综合文献、分析和解释研究结果、批判性评价文献来源以及如何撰写结构良好的段落的具体技巧。
🚀 文献综述的下一步和更多资源
视频的最后部分提供了一些关于如何进行文献综述的下一步建议和额外资源。鼓励观众使用视频中提供的5步计划来规划自己的文献综述过程,并建议与教师或导师讨论以获取更多特定于主题的资源。
Mindmap
Keywords
💡文献综述
💡研究项目
💡可信源
💡批判性分析
💡研究问题
💡结构化
💡主题
💡引用
💡写作
💡评估
Highlights
本次网络研讨会的主题是文献综述和寻找可信赖的来源。
文献综述应描述与项目标题或研究问题相关的先前研究和数据。
文献综述总结了、分析并评估了已经完成的研究,为读者提供了该主题的知识概览。
文献综述帮助你识别与研究主题相关的主要理论、方法和现有研究中的空白。
文献综述不仅仅是对书籍、文章等文献资源的描述性列表或总结。
进行文献综述的原因包括展示对主题领域的深入理解以及发现研究领域中的开放性问题和持续争论。
撰写文献综述的五个步骤包括:搜索相关文献、分析来源、确定主要主题和话题、组织结构你的综述以及撰写文献综述。
在搜索文献时,应使用关键词并查找包括期刊文章、书籍、博客、新闻或杂志等多种类型的文献来源。
评估文献来源时,要考虑作者的权威性、信息的准确性、内容的偏见以及资料的时效性。
识别文献中的主要主题、辩论、论点和研究空白是撰写文献综述的重要步骤。
组织和结构化文献综述时,可以选择按时间顺序、主题或使用的方法进行分组。
撰写文献综述时,应包含引言、主体和结论部分,并在每个部分中使用适当的小标题。
在文献综述的结论中,应总结关键发现并强调它们对研究问题的重要性。
最终提示包括提前规划、保持分析性、跟踪你的来源以及确保你的来源的可信度。
下一步和进一步资源包括使用视频中概述的5个步骤计划你的文献综述过程,并寻找特定于你主题的文献综述来源。
Transcripts
TITLE: Literature review and finding trustworthy
sources SERIES: Pearson - AccessEd EPQ Express support
videos Webinar number: 2
Welcome to this webinar on literature reviews
and finding trustworthy sources. So you're doing a literature
review* So you're considering doing a literature
review. This video is great for those of you who:
- Are doing a dissertation or investigation research project this could be part of
an Extended Project Qualification, otherwise known as an EPQ, or any research project
- Those who need to write a literature review for their research project
- If you are writing a stand-alone literature review for another project
- If you want to understand how to critically assess literature sources, which this video
will show you how to do - And, for of you those who want a 5-step
plan for writing a literature review we'll show you the process for doing this.
One thing to note is that we will use the term literature review throughout this
video, although you may hear other terms used for the same thing, for example research
review, which is what it is called if you're doing an EPQ. Literature review tends
to be used more often. What we'll cover*
So, what will we cover in this video? We'll cover:
- What is a literature review - What is the reason we write literature reviews
- Types of literature review sources - Knowing whether sources are trustworthy
- How to critically analyse sources - 5 steps for conducting a literature review
- And, how to structure and write a literature review.
What is a literature review So, what is a literature review? A literature
review should describe the previous studies and data that are relevant to your project
title or research question. A literature review is an overview of sources on a specific topic
that you are doing for your research project.
- Your literature review summarises, analyses and evaluates research that has already been
done and is available on your subject - It provides your reader (be that your teacher,
or supervisor) with an overview of knowledge on this subject
- It allows you to identify relevant theories, methods, and gaps in the existing research,
to do with your topic - It presents this research in an organised
way - And it clearly addresses your research project
title, question or challenge. Literature review example
Here is a short extract from an example literature review. This shows how a literature review
looks practically when laid out. It's written text, with a series of references to authors
and sources, embedded inside paragraphs of text. You can that for example with the reference
of The Economist online or BBC News or Jackson 2017. This might form part of writing your
research project dissertation. Although this literature review is fictional,
it's about the use of social media linked to the performance of secondary school students,
it is an example of what one could look like. Later, you will learn the steps in more detail
for writing one of these and the structure too. We will revisit this.
What is NOT a literature review* So what is not a literature. To be clear,
we'll lay out some of the things that are not a literature review. This will help you
understand what is contained in one and what isn't.
- One, a literature review is not just a descriptive list or summaries of books, articles or whichever
literature sources you are using. The literature review is about understanding and conveying
what is contained in your sources. A literature review is not a source-by-source summary of
everything you have read. This is wrong because it means you won't be able to synthesize
or bring together the sources enough, and you risk focusing too much on your own reading,
instead of focusing on your research topic specifically.
- Number two, it is also not an exhaustive bibliography on everything that has ever been
written on the topic, you need to make an active decision and careful selection about
what sources to include. - Number three, it's not a list of your
arguments and ideas, like in a normal essay. Arguments and counterarguments and your own
ideas are included the discussion section of your dissertation.
If you're doing an EPQ or another research project or paper, the literature review simply
lays out the most important existing pieces of evidence and thinking, before then, in
the next section, moving on to argue your assessment of the question and different viewpoints.
Why do we do literature reviews? So what are the reasons for doing a literature
review? Why do literature reviews (or research reviews as some call them), exist, and why
are they such an important part of your dissertation or research project.
There are some key things that literature reviews help you to identify.
- It helps you identify what research has already been done in your area or on your
topic, which is an important part of showing context and background
- It helps you identify the big thinkers on your topic. In other words, who are the well-known
authors or writers in this area - It helps you identify the main ideas, interpretations
and fields of thought relevant to your research question.
Why do we do literature reviews? Other reasons that we do literature reviews
include: - Demonstrating to your reader, teacher or
supervisor an in-depth understanding of your topic area. This includes the key concepts,
theories and definitions associated with your topic.
- Finding the areas where there are open ended questions and ongoing disputes, so there is
scope for you to add your own point of view. - And then it's convincing your reader,
teacher or supervisor that your research question is important, interesting and worth
writing about! That will encourage them to read on.
5 steps for writing a literature review
Conducting a literature review involves collecting, evaluating and analysing publications, such
as books and journal articles, that relate to your research question. Here are 5 main
steps in the process of writing a literature review, which we will outline in more detail
in this video and explain how you go about each stage.
One, search for the relevant literature and sources related to your topic, that you are
considering using. Two, analyse the sources you are going to use. We will show you a simple
table for analysing and evaluating your sources later. Three, identify the main themes and
topics in the literature sources you have found. Four, understand how to structure your
literature review, and then outline this format ready for writing. This is a good way to plan
the contents of your review and format it. Five, finally, write the literature review.
Step 1: Search types of sources So, step 1 of writing a literature review,
search. If you are writing the literature review section of a dissertation, investigation
or research paper you will search for literature related to your title and specific research
question. Literature sources come in a variety of forms. These can be broken down into primary
and secondary sources. Primary sources are generally sources that are original, i.e.
they are first-hand information close to study. Primary sources could include speeches, letters,
diaries, autobiographies, interviews, official reports, and the likes for photographs or
drawings.
Secondary sources provide non-original or second-hand data or information. For your
literature review, you are likely to mainly be using secondary sources. These could include
books, journals, online articles, blogs, newspapers or magazines.
Will we talk about the difference between a blog or online article that's say by an
expert, such as a former astronaut talking about the International Space station, versus
taking a quote from a blog that is from an enthusiast with no obvious expertise or qualification
in that topic. As we will see later, often it's better to go with factual publications
over anything that could be seen as an opinion.
Step 1: Search finding your sources
In doing your search for sources, there are a variety of places that you could look for
these. So where to find your sources. In particular when you are searching online, you should
search for literature using keywords. Start by creating a list of keywords related to
your research topic. Places to find literature sources could include
your universities library catalogue, Google Scholar, online academic journals and articles.
These could include places such as JSTOR, Wiley, Project Muse, Medline, Econlit. These
are just a few examples. Also, you can use sources that provide publicly accessible summaries
of research, such as magazines or news organisations, for example the BBC, New Scientist or The
Economist. If using articles or books, read the abstract,
which is the summary text at the start of an article or book, to find out whether an
article is relevant to your question. When you find a useful book or article, you can
check the bibliography to find other relevant sources too.
One tip, to identify the most important publications on your topic, take note of the same authors
which keep appearing in your search. If these same authors or books or articles which keep
coming up in your search, you should make sure to have a look at these.
A second tip is if using an article online, you could find out how many times an article
has been cited on Google Scholar. A high citation count means an article has been influential
in the field, and should certainly be included in your literature review.
Step 1: Search trustworthy sources*
There are a lot of sources out there for your literature review. You might have had the
thought that it's a bit confusing or overwhelming knowing which sources to use, and which sources
you can trust, too. In particular there are a lot of sources online and these are variable
in how trustworthy they are. Trustworthy-ness isn't just about whether
or not a resource is untruthful, although that happens every so often. It is also about
how reliable a source is by academic standards and you should be maintaining these academic
standards as part of any research project you do.
Here are some key questions to ask yourself when you find a source:
* Authority. This means, is it clear who wrote the source. Are there indications of their
qualifications? Do they have the authority and expertise to be writing on this topic.
* Accuracy. Are the sources of factual information clearly listed? Remember, anyone can publish
on the internet. There will be varying levels of accuracy in content you find.
* Bias. Is there evidence of bias? In other words, would the author be writing for a specific
angle or what is their purpose for writing the source? For example, some media outlets
may have a particular bias, if you are thinking of using news-based sources. Sources from
media outlets are likely factually correct, this ticks off point number 2, although some
newspapers, perhaps tabloids, still have the chance to get facts wrong. Either way, it
may only be presenting one side of the story, which means there could be bias.
* Date. Are there dates to show when it was written? Or when the webpage was last updated
for example. Is there newer research disproving what was written? It's good to use sources
that are up to date as practice. Think about science projects for example and for example
a project on illness. A source from 2019 compared to 2009 may include new things that have been
discovered, like treatment or a cure for an illness, for example.
Step 2: analyse So step 2 is analyse your sources. You won't
be able to read absolutely everything that has been written on your topic. You'll have
to evaluate, in other words assess and determine, which sources are most relevant to your question,
and which ones will be most useful in helping you answer your research question or challenge
as part of your project or dissertation. For each publication and source, ask yourself:
* Who is the author? * What question or problem is the author trying
to address? * What is the author's central point or
main argument? * What are the key concepts?
* What findings and conclusions are made? * What evidence is used to support the conclusions?
* What are the strengths and weaknesses of the research?
* How does the publication relate to other literature in the field? Does it confirm,
add to, or challenge established knowledge? * And, how is the text relevant to your project
or assignment?
As said before, you should make sure your sources are credible, and make sure you read
any famous studies and major theories in your field of research, if these exist. If doing
a dissertation or investigation, you can demonstrate your grasp of how reliable a source is by
inserting footnotes. In these footnotes, you can comment on your own source assessment
of the reliability of the source, using the 4 questions we have just discussed on how
trustworthy is a source. Overall, the scope of your review will depend
on your topic and subject. In the sciences the focus will be on recent literature as
science evolves quickly. However it can be good to show that the context of a problem
has been understood by exploring its historical development. In the humanities you might take
a long historical perspective, for example examining how a concept has changed over time.
A key point to note is that, just because sources are older, it doesn't mean they
are unreliable. Step 3: identify main themes and
topics* Step 3. This is about identifying themes,
debates, arguments and gaps in your sources. During this stage, you can gather your sources.
It's helpful to gather your sources in one place. You can use this table to help you
collect notes on some of the sources you will be including in your literature review. This
is a tool for your planning, it isn't the literature review itself. Filling in the table
alone is the first step. You will then need to write up your evaluation, too.
You'll have your research question or research project title by this point. Take, for example,
the question is the UK government capable of responding to a climate emergency?.
You might read and select a variety of sources and then use this table and fill it in.
- In the first column on the left, author and date. You should note this down so that
you can remember the reference. In this case, Johnson, 2019, when the article was written.
- What is the type of source. I'm noting that this resource type was a government policy
document. - Then there's the theme. I'm noting that
the theme of the source is a government response to climate concerns.
- Strengths. You should list multiple strengths, for example does the source contain a lot
of specific detail or statistics for use, or does it contain a unique argument.
- Then there's the weaknesses. For example, this government report doesn't have much
critical analysis of government response to this issue, which could be helpful for this
specific research question about whether the UK government would be capable of responding
to a future climate emergency. So what other gaps exist in what your reading?
- Then, is there bias. What is the angle. Is there an angle or purpose to your source?
For example, this report might be more aimed at showing government previous successes in
dealing with climate change concerns. - What are the links to other sources you've
read? You should write what other sources your source links to and how. This would help
you group your ideas later when writing. - Finally, how is the source relevant to your
own topic or research area exactly? This will help you really focus and hone in on the detail.
In reality you will want to fill in the table in more detail than how it's been done here.
To begin organising your literature review's argument and structure, you do need to understand
the connections and relationships between the sources you've read. Based on your reading
and notes, you can look for: - Themes, so what questions or concepts keep
coming up across the literature? - Then there's the debates and conflicts
and contradictions, so where do sources disagree with each other?
- There's pivotal publications, so are there any influential theories or studies
that really impacted on your field of research? - And then there's the gaps, what is missing
from the literature?
This step will help you work out the structure of your literature review, which is up next.
Step 4: Grouping and structuring your review*
Step 4. Grouping and structuring your literature review. There are various approaches to organising
the body of a literature review. This is about how you might group your sources or information
and you should have a good idea of your strategy before you delve into the writing. Here are
some ways that you could group your sources for your literature review.
One, is date order, or chronological. The simplest approach. You examine the development
of the topic over time. However, if you choose this approach, be careful to avoid simply
listing and summarising sources in date order. Try to analyse patterns, turning points and
key debates that have impacted thinking. Number two is by theme. This is one of the
most common ways of grouping ideas. If you have found some recurring central themes or
points, you can organise your literature review into sections that address different aspects
of the topic. For example, if you are reviewing literature about equalities or inequalities
in migrant working conditions, key themes might include workplace policy, or language
barriers, or cultural attitudes, legal status, and economic access.
Three, you can organise by methods used. This is mainly relevant to if you are doing an
investigation unit. If you draw your sources from different subjects or fields that use
a variety of research methods, you might want to compare the results and conclusions
that emerge from using different methods. For example, this could be in a scientific
project, and might be the results that you get from qualitative versus quantitative research
methods. If you are doing a dissertation, you will be using secondary sources. For a
dissertation, you might have a small-scale survey or an interview which you could use
to be one or more source, but it shouldn't be a significant part of the research.
Step 4: your literature review outline*
For the next part of step 4, we're looking at how to structure your literature review
outline. After grouping your sources, this is another important step in planning what
the structure of the literature review will look like.
You can picture structuring your literature review a bit like a funnel:
- Up top, you can start with a broader overview of your literature sources. This could be
some background and context for the literature review. This may include sources that are
linked in theme to your topic but might not be as close to your research question.
- In the middle, this is where you start to narrow. You might look at a smaller subset
of sources but in more detail. - Then at the end, at the bottom, this is
where you narrow and pick out the key and main sources for your research question. These
sources will address the issues that are closely related to your research project title. You
might highlight your 3-4 main sources here in even more detail.
Step 5: write your literature review* Step 5: write your literature review. Like
any other academic text, your literature review should have an introduction, a main body,
and a conclusion, even if your introduction and conclusion are just brief summaries. What
you include in each depends on what type of research project you are writing a literature
review for and how long it has to be.
So number one, the introduction. The introduction should clearly outline the focus and purpose
of the literature review. If you are writing this as part of a dissertation research project,
make sure to reiterate your central problem, the research question or challenge and to
give a brief summary of the academic context surrounding this topic. You can emphasise
the timeliness of the topic, for example, many recent studies have focused on the
difficulties with recycling plastic or highlight the importance of a topic, for example
given the recent studies on the negative impact of pollution caused by waste, recycling
is an important topic and very socially significant.
Number two, the main body of your literature review. Depending on your length of the literature
review, you will want to divide the body into subsections. You should use a subheading based
on theme, time period, or method you use. This links backs to grouping and structuring
your review earlier in the video.
As you write, make sure to follow tips. You will have done much of this evaluation in
your planning, using the table we showed earlier in the video. So, the tips:
- Summarise and synthesise. Give an overview of the main points of each source and combine
them into a coherent whole. - Then analyse and interpret, don't just
re-word what other researchers have said. To try express points in your own words, discussing
the significance of findings in relation to the literature as a whole.
- Then critically evaluate, mention the strengths, weaknesses and gaps of your sources.
- Compare. Make sure to compare sources to one another to show you understand.
- Then finally, write in well-structured paragraphs. Use transition words to draw connections, comparisons and
contrasts.
Three, the conclusion. In the conclusion, you should summarise the key findings you
have taken from the literature and emphasise their significance for your research question.
You should also highlight the issues about which there is debate, which will lead naturally
into the discussion you will do later.
Step 5: Write your literature review*
Here is the same short excerpt of a literature from earlier, a literature review on social
media and the impact on academic performance. So this is an example of what a literature
review might look like. Here some different sections highlighted, which we'll just have
a look at. At the beginning, the theme of the paragraph
is introduced, so in this case it's the impact of social media platforms on the academic
performance of secondary pupils has been well researched. Secondly, in grey, there are different
points of view on the topic which are introduced and this is backed up by citing the author
of the source, or what the source is, and the date. Here it's the Economist Online
2019 and BCC News 2018 are used as sources. Then, moving on, you can see the section highlighted
in green. Now this section elaborates on your research findings. Again, this mentions who
wrote the source and when. Lastly, highlighted in yellow, it states the significance of the
research findings.
Overall, this is an example of how part of the literature could be structured, or example
of several paragraphs. You can learn more on referencing and bibliographies in a later
video. Final tips for your literature
review* So, what are our final tips for conducting
a literature review or research review? Plan ahead. You can follow the 5 simple steps
laid out in this video, from finding your literature resources, to evaluating them,
to structuring your review, to then writing it. The next one is being analytical and giving
a clear picture. The best literature reviews don't just summarise sources, they analyse
and evaluate sources to give a clear picture of the state of knowledge on the subject.
They will also compare the sources and draw out key themes. The third one is keeping track
of your sources. You can keep track of your sources in clear list as you go. Make sure
to record the name and the date. This will prevent you losing them and having to dig
around later. Make a note of where exactly you found these, too, whether it be an online
or a book from a library. This will help you find them later if you need them. We'll
be giving more tips on how to practically keep track of your sources in another video,
referencing and bibliographies. Lastly, be sure to check how trustworthy your sources
are, particular those online, by asking yourself the 4 key questions from earlier.
Next steps and further resources* So, to finish off, what about next steps and
further resources. Well here's what you can do. Use our 5 step plan outlined in this
video to plan how you will conduct your literature review process. Once you have your research
question and topic to hand, find 3 sources relating to these. Practice evaluating them
and identifying themes, gaps and debates within them, using our table from earlier in the
video. This is really good practice for doing this for the rest of your source.! Speak to
teacher or supervisor about further resources and good place to find literature review sources
specific to your topic.
Finally, see the comments section of this video for any links to further resources outlined
in this video.
Thanks for listening.
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