真相与透明,妥协与气候变化

J. F. Lapeña
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Truth (veritas) is only verifiable if it is transparent. \nThe Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE), the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ), the Open Access Scholarly Publishing Association (OASPA), and the World Association of Medical Editors (WAME) have been collaborating to identify principles of transparency and best practice for scholarly publications.6 The fourth version of this work in progress was published on September 15, 2022 and is available from: https://publicationethics.org/files/principles-transparency-best-practice-scholarly-publishing.pdf   The Philippine Journal of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery upholds these principles of transparency and continues to strive to implement these best practices. \n  \nIn a related development, the International Association of Scientific, Technical and Medical Publishers (STM) has proposed a standard taxonomy for peer review,7 recognizing a need to identify and standardize definitions and terminology in peer review practices to help align nomenclature as more publishers use open peer review models. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们发现,沟通的大敌是对沟通的错觉。2022年9月6日,研究诚信专家、数据和分析专家、出版和运营团队以及Hindawi及其母公司Wiley的法律顾问进行了联合调查,初步建议撤回511篇仅因审稿人活动而受到损害的文章同月,物理出版商物理研究所(IOP)宣布撤回494篇论文,因为调查表明这些论文“可能是由商业实体(或造纸厂)创作、操纵和/或出售的”今年10月,爱思唯尔(Elsevier)期刊《思维技能与创造力》(Thinking Skills and Creativity)撤回了47篇论文,这些论文似乎是由一家造纸厂发表的,因为它们都是在“一份非法审稿人报告的积极建议”下被接受的。造纸厂和虚假的同行评议破坏了科学的可靠性,因为科学是建立在幻觉而不是事实的基础上的。真理(veritas)只有在透明的情况下才能被证实。出版伦理委员会(COPE)、开放获取期刊目录(DOAJ)、开放获取学术出版协会(OASPA)和世界医学编辑协会(WAME)一直在合作确定学术出版物的透明度原则和最佳做法这项工作正在进行的第四个版本于2022年9月15日发布,可从以下网站获得:https://publicationethics.org/files/principles-transparency-best-practice-scholarly-publishing.pdf菲律宾耳鼻喉头颈外科杂志坚持这些透明度原则,并继续努力实施这些最佳实践。在一个相关的发展中,国际科学、技术和医学出版商协会(STM)提出了一个同行评议的标准分类法,7认识到有必要在同行评议实践中识别和标准化定义和术语,以帮助校准命名法,因为越来越多的出版商使用开放的同行评议模式。这种同行评议分类法将有助于使文章和期刊的同行评议过程更加透明,并使科学界能够更好地评估和比较不同期刊之间的同行评议做法。根据STM,同行评议应该使用四个组成部分来描述:7 .身份透明:所有身份可见:审稿人、作者、决策编辑[编辑]彼此都可见单一匿名化:审稿人身份对作者不可见,作者和编辑身份对所有人都可见(也称为单一蒙面,以前称为单盲,审稿)双重匿名化;审稿人身份对作者不可见,作者身份对审稿人不可见,编辑身份对两者都知道(也称为双重屏蔽,以前称为双重盲法,review)三重匿名化:审稿人身份对作者或编辑不可见,作者身份对审稿人或编辑不可见,编辑身份对审稿人或作者(也称为三重屏蔽,以前称为三重盲法,review)不可见。只有编辑(传统审稿),直接与其他审稿人(有或没有他们的身份可见)互动,和/或直接与作者(有或没有身份可见)关于审稿过程的信息被发布:选项包括不提供信息、审稿摘要、审稿报告、审稿选择发表的审稿报告、作者选择发表的审稿报告、提交的稿件(可作为预印本发布)、作者选择加入的投稿、编辑与作者的通信、作者的回复(反驳)信、审稿身份、审稿选择加入的审稿身份、编辑身份。是否进行发表后评论:在线评论可能是公开的(评论者可能是匿名的或需要签名评论;还可以包括评论是否仅限审核或邀请;此项目不包括给编辑的信件。如果不允许评论,则不提及此项目。使用STM术语,《菲律宾耳鼻喉头颈外科杂志》可以描述如下:身份透明度:双重匿名审稿人互动:编辑审稿信息发布:无。我们正在更新《作者指南》和《关于杂志》以反映这些进展。另一方面,《菲律宾耳鼻喉头颈外科杂志》同意共同发表一篇社论,呼吁富裕国家采取更多措施支持非洲和其他脆弱国家减轻气候变化对健康的影响。 8本期的客座社论由16个非洲卫生期刊的编辑撰写,并由259个国际期刊共同发表,包括《柳叶刀》、《英国医学杂志》、《新英格兰医学杂志》、《印度国家医学杂志》、《澳大利亚医学杂志》和《菲律宾耳鼻喉头颈外科杂志》(见http://press.psprings.co.uk/bmj/october/Journals.pdf)。从未有如此多的期刊聚集在一起发出同样的呼吁,这反映了目前世界面临的气候变化紧急情况的严重性。作者说,尽管非洲对造成这场危机所做的事情很少,但它受到的影响却不成比例。他们敦促富裕国家加强对非洲和脆弱国家的支持,以应对气候变化过去、现在和未来的影响他们解释说,气候危机对整个非洲健康的环境和社会决定因素产生了影响,导致了毁灭性的健康影响。例如,在西非和中非,严重洪水造成死亡,迫使人们因失去住所、耕地和牲畜而移徙,而极端天气破坏了水和粮食供应,加剧了粮食不安全和营养不良,每年在非洲造成170万人死亡。8洪水和对环境卫生的破坏造成病媒生态的变化,也导致疟疾、登革热、埃博拉病毒、8在最易受气候冲击影响的国家,气候危机总共摧毁了国内生产总值(GDP)的五分之一他们写道,对非洲的破坏应该是所有国家最关心的问题,因为在一个相互联系的世界里,让国家听任环境冲击的摆布会造成不稳定,对所有国家都有严重的后果我们呼吁2022年联合国气候变化大会(COP27)的与会各方采取具体步骤,将《巴黎协定》下的承诺转化为行动,而不是像在格拉斯哥COP26上那样无所作为,实现我们的集体气候目标。事实上,是透明的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Truth and Transparency, Compromise and Climate Change
The great enemy of communication, we find, is the illusion of it.   William Hollingsworth Whyte, 19501 On September 6, 2022, a combined investigation by research integrity experts, data and analytics experts, publishing and operational teams, and legal counsels from Hindawi and its parent company Wiley, led to the initial recommendation to retract 511 articles that were compromised based on reviewer activity alone.2 That same month, the physics publisher Institute of Physics (IOP) announced the retraction of 494 papers after investigation indicated they “may have been created, manipulated, and/or sold by a commercial entity” (or paper mill).3 This October, the Elsevier journal Thinking Skills and Creativity retracted 47 papers that appear to have been generated by a paper mill because they were each accepted on the “positive advice of one illegitimate reviewer report.”4 Paper mills and phony peer reviews5 undermine the soundness of science, because it is based on illusion rather than truth. Truth (veritas) is only verifiable if it is transparent. The Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE), the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ), the Open Access Scholarly Publishing Association (OASPA), and the World Association of Medical Editors (WAME) have been collaborating to identify principles of transparency and best practice for scholarly publications.6 The fourth version of this work in progress was published on September 15, 2022 and is available from: https://publicationethics.org/files/principles-transparency-best-practice-scholarly-publishing.pdf   The Philippine Journal of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery upholds these principles of transparency and continues to strive to implement these best practices.   In a related development, the International Association of Scientific, Technical and Medical Publishers (STM) has proposed a standard taxonomy for peer review,7 recognizing a need to identify and standardize definitions and terminology in peer review practices to help align nomenclature as more publishers use open peer review models. This peer review taxonomy will help make the peer review process for articles and journals more transparent and will enable the community to better assess and compare peer review practices between different journals. According to STM, peer review should be described using four components:7   identity transparency: all identities visible: reviewers, authors, decision-making editor [editor] all visible to each other single anonymized: reviewer identity is not visible to the author, author and editor identities are visible to everyone (also known as single masked, formerly single blinded, review) double anonymized: reviewer identity is not visible to the author, author identity is not visible to the reviewer, editor identity is known to both (also known as double masked, formerly double blinded, review) triple anonymized: reviewer identity is not visible to the author or editor, author identity is not visible to the reviewer or editor, editor identity is not visible to reviewer or author (also known as triple masked, formerly triple blinded, review) who the reviewer interacts with: the editor only (traditional review), direct interaction with the other reviewers (with or without their identities visible), and/or directly with the authors (with or without identities visible) what information about the review process is published: options include no information, review summaries, review reports, review reports if the reviewer opts to have review published, review reports if the author opts to have review published, the submitted manuscript (can be posted as a preprint), the submitted manuscript if the author opts in, the editor’s correspondence with the author, the authors’ response (rebuttal) letter, reviewer identities, reviewer identities if the review opts in, editor identities 4. whether post-publication commenting takes place: online comments may be either open (commenters may be anonymous or required to sign comments; could also include whether comments are moderated) or invited only; this item does not include letters to the editor. This item is not mentioned if no commenting is allowed. Using STM terminology, the Philippine Journal of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery may be described as follows: Identity transparency: Double anonymized Reviewer interacts with: Editor Review information published: None We are updating our Instructions to Authors and About the Journal to reflect these developments. On another front, the Philippine Journal of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery has agreed to co-publish an editorial calling on wealthy countries to do more to support Africa and other vulnerable nations in mitigating the impact of climate change on health.8  The guest editorial in this issue is authored by the editors of 16 African health journals, and is co-published by 259 international journals, including The Lancet, British Medical Journal, New England Journal of Medicine, National Medical Journal of India, and Medical Journal of Australia and the Philippine Journal of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery (see http://press.psprings.co.uk/bmj/october/Journals.pdf). Never have so many journals come together to make the same call, reflecting the severity of the climate change emergency now facing the world. The authors say Africa has suffered disproportionately although it has done little to cause the crisis and urges wealthy nations to step up support for Africa and vulnerable countries in addressing past, present and future impacts of climate change.8 They explain that the climate crisis has had an impact on the environmental and social determinants of health across Africa, leading to devastating health effects. In West and Central Africa, for example, severe flooding resulted in mortality and forced migration from loss of shelter, cultivated land, and livestock, while extreme weather damages water and food supply, increasing food insecurity and malnutrition, which causes 1.7 million deaths annually in Africa.8 Changes in vector ecology brought about by floods and damage to environmental hygiene has also led to increases in malaria, dengue fever, Ebola virus, and other infectious diseases across sub-Saharan Africa.8 In all, it is estimated that the climate crisis has destroyed a fifth of the gross domestic product (GDP) of the countries most vulnerable to climate shocks.8 The damage to Africa should be of supreme concern to all nations, they write, because in an interconnected world, leaving countries to the mercy of environmental shocks creates instability that has severe consequences for all nations.8 We call on participants of the 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP27) to take concrete steps towards achieving our collective climate goals by turning their commitments under the Paris Agreement into action, without falling short as they did in COP26 Glasgow.9 Without compromise; in truth, transparently.
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