Editorial for Publications March 2016
- (i)
- Peer review is an on/off or binary switch, i.e., it’s about acceptance/rejection. No it isn’t—well, not only that. It’s about review and improvement too. I know for a fact (you will have to ask me personally if you want to know how I know this) that for hundreds of thousands of stm articles published over a year, something like 90% are revised after review and before publication. Sometimes with major revisions, sometimes minor, but you would have to be a monumental cynic not to believe that that results in some significant improvement to the published output. That percentage may even underestimate the level of revision, since, as we know, rejected items, often can then be revised as they are submitted to another, possibly lower-ranked journal, where the first revision will not be recorded. Of course, we are talking here about review administered by the publication outlet. Most sensible researchers, especially junior ones, will have colleagues, mostly likely in their own department, informally review the paper even before submission.
- (ii)
- Acceptance means the reviewers/editor think it’s “right”, and rejection means they think it’s “wrong”. No, it doesn't mean that. “Acceptance” means, or should mean, that they think it is publishable, and publishable in that journal. No more than that. Of course, you hope that peer review will pick up egregious, or even minor, errors. But rarely, except perhaps in some highly theoretical or math topics, could a reviewer be 100% certain of any pronouncement. A lot must be taken on trust, and even where, say, an experimental procedure is reproducible or replicable, a reviewer is not expected to do it (that’s for other researchers, if they wish and can get a grant). One of the best quotes I saw in a referee report was along these lines: ‘This is remarkable. I don’t think it’s correct, but I can’t fault the science as presented. So it deserves to be published so that others can comment and try it for themselves’. That’s a pretty good encapsulation of the scientific or scholarly process.
Reference
- An Interview with Jeffrey Beall. 2016. Available online: http://scholarlykitchen.sspnet.org/2016/02/08/an-interview-with-jeffrey-beall/ (accessed on 8 February 2016).
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Singleton, A. Editorial for Publications March 2016. Publications 2016, 4, 8. https://doi.org/10.3390/publications4010008
Singleton A. Editorial for Publications March 2016. Publications. 2016; 4(1):8. https://doi.org/10.3390/publications4010008
Chicago/Turabian StyleSingleton, Alan. 2016. "Editorial for Publications March 2016" Publications 4, no. 1: 8. https://doi.org/10.3390/publications4010008
APA StyleSingleton, A. (2016). Editorial for Publications March 2016. Publications, 4(1), 8. https://doi.org/10.3390/publications4010008