Literature DB >> 25865035

The evolution of peer review as a basis for scientific publication: directional selection towards a robust discipline?

Catarina Ferreira1,2,3, Guillaume Bastille-Rousseau1, Amanda M Bennett1, E Hance Ellington1, Christine Terwissen1, Cayla Austin1, Adrian Borlestean1, Melanie R Boudreau1, Kevin Chan1, Adrian Forsythe1, Thomas J Hossie1, Kristen Landolt1, Jessica Longhi1, Josée-Anne Otis1, Michael J L Peers1, Jason Rae1, Jacob Seguin1, Cristen Watt1, Morgan Wehtje1, Dennis L Murray1.   

Abstract

Peer review is pivotal to science and academia, as it represents a widely accepted strategy for ensuring quality control in scientific research. Yet, the peer-review system is poorly adapted to recent changes in the discipline and current societal needs. We provide historical context for the cultural lag that governs peer review that has eventually led to the system's current structural weaknesses (voluntary review, unstandardized review criteria, decentralized process). We argue that some current attempts to upgrade or otherwise modify the peer-review system are merely sticking-plaster solutions to these fundamental flaws, and therefore are unlikely to resolve them in the long term. We claim that for peer review to be relevant, effective, and contemporary with today's publishing demands across scientific disciplines, its main components need to be redesigned. We propose directional changes that are likely to improve the quality, rigour, and timeliness of peer review, and thereby ensure that this critical process serves the community it was created for.
© 2015 Cambridge Philosophical Society.

Keywords:  critique; long-term solutions; maladaptation; peer review; structural flaws

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25865035     DOI: 10.1111/brv.12185

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc        ISSN: 0006-3231


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