A research gap is an unexplored or under-researched area within your field of study a question that hasn't been answered or a problem that lacks a satisfactory solution. Identifying a genuine research gap is the foundation of a strong PhD thesis and ensures your work makes an original contribution to knowledge.
Without a well-defined research gap, your synopsis may be rejected, and your thesis may be seen as incremental or repetitive. We help you pinpoint gaps that are both significant and feasible to address within your PhD timeline.
A well-articulated research gap answers three critical questions: What don't we know? Why does it matter? How can your research fill this void? Our experts guide you through systematic literature analysis to identify gaps that lead to high-impact research.
Systematic approaches used by successful PhD scholars to identify original research contributions.
We conduct comprehensive literature reviews across Scopus, Web of Science, and UGC-CARE journals to map existing research, identify patterns, and pinpoint underexplored areas in your domain.
Using bibliometric tools like VOSviewer and CiteSpace, we analyze citation networks to identify emerging research fronts, influential papers, and areas where consensus is lacking.
We map identified problems against existing solutions to reveal gaps where current approaches are inadequate, leading to research questions that are both original and impactful.
Leverage modern research tools to streamline your gap identification process.
Use tools like Zotero, Mendeley, and Rayyan to organize papers, extract key insights, and identify themes across hundreds of research articles efficiently.
Create structured gap matrices that compare studies across parameters like methodology, sample, context, and findings to reveal missing pieces.
One-on-one guidance from domain experts who help validate your identified gaps and suggest refinements based on current research trends.
Receive a detailed gap audit report that includes a clear problem statement, research questions, and justification for your proposed study.