货币激励对同行评议接受度和完成度的影响:一项准随机干预试验。

IF 6 1区 医学 Q1 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
Critical Care Medicine Pub Date : 2025-06-01 Epub Date: 2025-03-06 DOI:10.1097/CCM.0000000000006637
Christopher S Cotton, Abid Alam, Sophie Tosta, Timothy G Buchman, David M Maslove
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:同行评议通常依赖于专家自愿花时间审查研究。这一过程给期刊带来了挑战,它们可能面临合格审稿人的短缺,导致处理论文的延迟或审稿不够彻底。我们通过实验测试了提供现金奖励来完成重症医学同行评议任务的影响。设计:准随机、盲法、交替治疗设计的干预性研究。背景:《危重病医学》(Critical Care Medicine, CCM),同行评议的专业期刊。受试者:所有在2023年9月至2024年3月6个月期间(不包括2周的假期窗口)收到CCM审查研究文章请求的审稿人。干预措施:在两周的交替过程中,发送审稿人邀请函,其中包括接受同行评审请求的250美元奖励(治疗)或不提供现金奖励的标准信件(对照组)。完成奖励邀请的审稿人收到了来自期刊的250美元支票。度量和主要结果:我们的主要结果是邀请到完成审查转换的比率,定义为提交的审查数量除以发出的审查邀请数量。次要结果包括“准时”转化率、邀请接受率、邀请接受时间、审查提交时间和审查质量。共发出715份审稿人邀请,其中414份(57.9%)包含奖励。218份(52.7%)激励邀请被接受,而对照组为144份(47.8%)。激励组收到评审邀请后提交同行评审报告的比例高于对照组(49.8% [206/414]vs. 42.2% [127/301]);P = 0.04)。在“生存分析”中,带有激励报价的邀请平均更快地完成(Cox比例风险比为1.30 [1.04-1.62];p = 0.02),相应的审稿时间缩短了大约1天(11天对12天)。在提交的333份审稿报告中,205份(61.6%)由编辑评估,研究组之间的审稿质量没有差异。结论:为完成同行评议报告提供现金奖励导致受邀评审员完成专业医学期刊评议的比例适度增加。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Effect of Monetary Incentives on Peer Review Acceptance and Completion: A Quasi-Randomized Interventional Trial.

Objectives: Peer review typically relies on experts volunteering their time to review research. This process presents challenges for journals that may face a shortage of qualified referees, resulting in either delay in handling papers or less thorough review than is optimal. We experimentally tested the impact of providing cash incentives to complete peer review assignments at Critical Care Medicine .

Design: Quasi-randomized, blinded, interventional study with an alternating treatment design.

Setting: Critical Care Medicine (CCM ), a peer-reviewed specialty journal.

Subjects: All reviewers receiving requests from CCM to review research articles during a 6-month period from September 2023 to March 2024 (excluding a 2-wk holiday window).

Interventions: In alternating 2-week blocks, reviewer invitation letters were sent out, including either an offer of $250 for accepting the peer review request (treatment) or the standard letter with no cash offer (control). Reviewers who fulfilled incentivized invitations received a $250 check from the journal.

Measurements and main results: Our primary outcome was the rate of invitation-to-completed-review conversion, defined as the number of reviews submitted divided by the number of reviewer invitations sent out. Secondary outcomes included the "on-time" conversion rate, invitation acceptance rate, time to invitation acceptance, time to review submission, and review quality. Seven hundred fifteen reviewer invitations were sent out, 414 of which (57.9%) included an incentive offer. Two hundred eighteen (52.7%) of the incentivized invitations were accepted, compared with 144 (47.8%) in the control group. A greater proportion of reviewer invitations led to submitted peer review reports in the incentive group than in the control group (49.8% [206/414] vs. 42.2% [127/301]; p = 0.04). In a "survival analysis," invitations sent with an incentive offer were fulfilled faster on average (Cox proportional hazard ratio, 1.30 [1.04-1.62]; p = 0.02), corresponding to quicker review times of approximately 1 day (11 vs. 12 d). Of the 333 reviewer reports submitted, 205 (61.6%) were assessed by editors, with no difference in review quality noted between study arms.

Conclusions: Providing cash incentive for completing peer review reports resulted in a modest increase in the share of invited reviewers who complete reviews for a specialty medical journal.

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来源期刊
Critical Care Medicine
Critical Care Medicine 医学-危重病医学
CiteScore
16.30
自引率
5.70%
发文量
728
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Critical Care Medicine is the premier peer-reviewed, scientific publication in critical care medicine. Directed to those specialists who treat patients in the ICU and CCU, including chest physicians, surgeons, pediatricians, pharmacists/pharmacologists, anesthesiologists, critical care nurses, and other healthcare professionals, Critical Care Medicine covers all aspects of acute and emergency care for the critically ill or injured patient. Each issue presents critical care practitioners with clinical breakthroughs that lead to better patient care, the latest news on promising research, and advances in equipment and techniques.
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