What motivates people to review articles?
A survey of 307 reviewers of submissions to the International Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems to gain a better understanding of their motivations for reviewing.
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A survey of 307 reviewers of submissions to the International Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems to gain a better understanding of their motivations for reviewing.
The case of the human-computer interaction community.
An editor of Nature Publishing Group has resigned in a very public protest the recent decision to allow authors to pay money to expedite peer review of their submitted papers.
Biomedical researchers look to post-publication peer review to build grant funding case.
What if every creative endeavor had to go through Peer Review?
"Peer review is mortally sick" according to Vitek Tracz.
Behind the headlines are exciting initiatives that have the potential to, not just improve peer review, but optimize it for 21st century scholarship.
BioMed Central is retracting 43 papers possibly involving third-party companies selling the service.
When people talk about the flaws in the scientific process, they often raise the problem of peer review. Right now, when a researcher submits an article for publication in a journal, it's sent off to his or her peers for constructive criticism or even rejection.
The professionally trained scientists who make decisions on biology papers at the big journals with the big journal impact factors have significantly less scientific experience and far weaker publication records than the editors of lower journal impact factor biology journals.
Wiley is piloting a partnership with Publons to give you official recognition for your peer review work. This partnership means you can opt-in to have your reviews for participating Wiley journals automatically added to your reviewer profile on Publons.
Nature is offering anonymity for both reviewer and reviewed, but questions remain about value and effectiveness of the approach.
A simulation of grant submission and peer review shows that small biases in evaluation can have big consequences.
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Quality control in science journals is evolving, with a code of ethics in hot pursuit.
We need to assess who gets funded based on research merit, not journal label.
Researchers on social media discuss the potential impact of making peer review more transparent.
A few professional scientists have found a sneaky way to cheat their way up the career ladder. They evaluate their own research by pretending to be someone else.
Evaluative strategies that increase the mean quality of published science may also increase the risk of rejecting unconventional or outstanding work.
Opinion article by the founders of PubPeer.com on right to anonymity.
When a handful of authors were caught reviewing their own papers, it exposed weaknesses in modern publishing systems. Editors are trying to plug the holes.
Celebrating Open Access Week 2014 affords an opportunity to study and promote all aspects of ‘Open.’
We discuss the views and experiences of our Editorial Board Members towards open peer review on this biomedical journal.
Pros and cons of an alternative for today’s method of allocating research funds using peer review.
Welcome efforts are being made to recognize academics who give up their time to peer review.
Recent retraction of two papers on stem-cell research by the journal Nature highlights weaknesses in this self-regulatory framework that scientists need to address.
The release of the 2014 Impact Factor Report was being awaited, as usual, with some anticipation. Yet this comes at a time when there is an ever-rising tide of contestation about its value in a radically changing research environment, especially in the developing world.
Commenters on post-publication peer review sites such as PubPeer are catching errors that traditional peer reviewers have missed.
The changing nature of research evaluation in UK higher education is creating perverse and damaging consequences that reinforce an excessively narrow definition of what counts as "high-quality" research.
Anonymity of authors as well as reviewers could level field for women and minorities in science.