Three common sources of error in peer review and how to minimize them

IF 0.2 Q4 EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
L. Aarssen
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Researchers have an odd love-hate relationship with peer review. Most regard it as agonizing, but at the same time, necessary. Peer review is of course a good thing when it provides the value that is expected of it: weeding out junk papers, and improving the rest. Unfortunately, however, the former often doesn't work particularly well, and when the latter works, it usually happens only after a lot of wasted time, hoop-jumping and wading through absurdity. Perhaps we put up with this simply because the toil and pain of it all has been sustained for so long that it has come to define the culture of academia—one that believes that no contribution can be taken seriously unless it has suffered and endured the pain, and thus earned the coveted badge of 'peer-reviewed publication'. Here, I argue that the painful route to endorsement payoff from peer review, and its common failure to provide the value expected of it, are routinely exacerbated by three sources of error in the peer-review process, all of which can be minimized with some changes in practice. Some interesting data for context are provided from a recent analysis of peer-review results from the journal, Functional Ecology. Like many journals now, Functional Ecology invites submitting authors to include a list of suggested reviewers for their manuscripts, and editors commonly invite some of their reviewers from this list. Fox et al. (2016) found that author-preferred reviewers rated papers much more positively than did editor-selected reviewers, and papers reviewed by author-preferred reviewers were much more likely to be invited for revision than were papers reviewed by editor-selected reviewers. Few will be surprised by these findings, and there is good reason to be concerned of course that the expected value from peer review here has missed the mark. This failure is undoubtedly not unique to Functional Ecology. It is, I suspect, likely to be a systemic feature of the traditional single-blind peer-review model— where reviewers know who the authors are, but not vice versa. The critical question is: what is the signal of failure here?— the fact that author-preferred reviewers rated papers more positively?— or the fact that editorselected reviewers rated papers more negatively? Either one could be a product of peer-review error, and at least three explanations could be involved:
同行评议中三个常见的错误来源以及如何减少它们
研究人员对同行评议有一种奇怪的爱恨情仇。大多数人认为这是痛苦的,但同时也是必要的。同行评议当然是一件好事,因为它提供了预期的价值:淘汰垃圾论文,并改进其余的论文。然而,不幸的是,前者往往不是特别有效,而后者通常是在浪费了大量时间、跳圈和涉猎荒谬之后才出现的。也许我们之所以能忍受这些,只是因为这些辛劳和痛苦已经持续了太久,以至于它已经定义了学术界的文化——这种文化认为,除非它遭受和忍受了痛苦,否则任何贡献都不会被认真对待,从而赢得了令人垂涎的“同行评议出版物”的徽章。在这里,我认为从同行评议中获得认可的痛苦之路,以及它通常无法提供预期的价值,通常会因同行评议过程中的三个错误来源而恶化,所有这些错误都可以通过实践中的一些改变来最小化。《功能生态学》杂志最近对同行评议结果的分析提供了一些有趣的数据。像现在的许多期刊一样,《功能生态学》邀请投稿作者提供一份推荐的审稿人名单,编辑通常会从这个名单中邀请一些审稿人。Fox等人(2016)发现,作者偏好的审稿人对论文的评价要比编辑选择的审稿人积极得多,由作者偏好的审稿人审查的论文比编辑选择的审稿人审查的论文更有可能被邀请修改。很少有人会对这些发现感到惊讶,当然,我们有充分的理由担心同行评议的预期价值没有达到标准。这种失败无疑不是功能生态学所独有的。我怀疑,这可能是传统的单盲同行评审模式的一个系统性特征——审稿人知道作者是谁,而作者不知道审稿人是谁。关键的问题是:这里的失败信号是什么?——倾向于作者的审稿人对论文的评价更积极?还是编辑挑选的审稿人对论文的评价更负面?其中任何一种都可能是同行评议错误的产物,至少有三种解释可能涉及:
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Ideas in Ecology and Evolution
Ideas in Ecology and Evolution EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY-
自引率
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4
审稿时长
36 weeks
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