| Literature DB >> 29466467 |
Francisco Grimaldo1, Ana Marušić2, Flaminio Squazzoni3.
Abstract
This paper examines research on peer review between 1969 and 2015 by looking at records indexed from the Scopus database. Although it is often argued that peer review has been poorly investigated, we found that the number of publications in this field doubled from 2005. A half of this work was indexed as research articles, a third as editorial notes and literature reviews and the rest were book chapters or letters. We identified the most prolific and influential scholars, the most cited publications and the most important journals in the field. Co-authorship network analysis showed that research on peer review is fragmented, with the largest group of co-authors including only 2.1% of the whole community. Co-citation network analysis indicated a fragmented structure also in terms of knowledge. This shows that despite its central role in research, peer review has been examined only through small-scale research projects. Our findings would suggest that there is need to encourage collaboration and knowledge sharing across different research communities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29466467 PMCID: PMC5821355 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0193148
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Number of publications about peer review.
Number of records on peer review (left) and number of records published in English on any topic from 1969 to 2015 in Scopus (right).
Fig 2Percentage of records on peer review per type and year (Scopus data).
Fig 3The top 10 countries in which research on peer review is performed (Scopus data).
Fig 4The top 10 institutions in which research on peer review is performed (Scopus data).
Fig 5Number of publications per year for the top 10 most prolific authors in sample 1 (Scopus data).
Fig 6Ratio between the number of citations of papers on peer review and the total number of citations by the journal on sample 1 (Scopus data).
The top 10 most central authors in the co-authorship networks (Scopus data).
| Sample 1 | Sample 2 | Sample 3 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bosch, F. | 6885 | Bosch, F. | 2842 | Schunn, C.D. | 185 |
| Cobo, E. | 6388 | Cobo, E. | 2590 | Cho, K. | 157 |
| Altman, D.G. | 5751 | Flanagin, A. | 2319 | Gehringer, E.F. | 126 |
| Flanagin, A. | 5326 | Altman, D.G. | 1870 | Lee, R. | 108 |
| Rennie, D. | 3021 | Godlee, F. | 1335 | Allen, L. | 102 |
| Marusic, A. | 2956 | Rennie, D. | 892 | Jones, L.S. | 90 |
| Moher, D. | 1883 | Cook, J. | 792 | Terveen, L. | 72 |
| Justice, A.D. | 1705 | Marusic, A. | 750 | Bollen, J. | 62 |
| Godlee, F. | 1414 | Johnson, N. | 693 | Van Leeuwen, T.N. | 59 |
| Cook, J. | 1264 | Boutron, I. | 606 | Trevisan, M. | 56 |
Network statistics of the co-authorship networks in the three samples (Scopus data).
| Sample 1 | Sample 2 | Sample 3 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N° Nodes | 7971 | N° Nodes | 5590 | N° Nodes | 2753 |
| N° Edges | 18689 | N° Edges | 12657 | N° Edges | 5309 |
| Density | 0.0006 | Density | 0.0008 | Density | 0.001 |
| Diameter | 14 | Diameter | 12 | Diameter | 8 |
| N° Clusters | 1910 | N° Clusters | 1378 | N° Clusters | 790 |
| Cluster size (avg) | 4.1 | Cluster size (avg) | 4.1 | Cluster size (avg) | 3.5 |
| Cluster size (std) | 5.8 | Cluster size (std) | 4.6 | Cluster size (std) | 3.0 |
Fig 7Internal connections in the biggest community of scientists working on peer review (sample 1).
Note that the node size refers to the author’s betweeness centrality.
Fig 8Biggest communities of scientists working on peer review.
Sample 1 on the left, i.e., sample 3 on the right, i.e., outside medicine). Note that the node size refers to the author’s betweeness centrality.
Fig 9The citation network of peer review (Scopus data).
Network statistics of the co-citation network and the giant component (Scopus data).
| 1829 | |
| 36531 | |
| 0.022 | |
| 33 | |
| 192 | |
| 9.526 | |
| 48.232 | |
| 33.62% | |
| 615 | |
| 1925 | |
| 0.010 | |
| 33 | |
The most influential articles in the co-citation networks (Scopus data).
| 1 | Merton, R.K. (1973), The Sociology of Science: Theoretical and Empirical Investigations, Chicago: University of Chicago Press |
| 2 | Zuckerman, H., Merton, R.K. (1971), Patterns of evaluation in science: Institutionalisation, structure and functions of the referee system. Minerva, 9, pp. 66–100 |
| 3 | Horrobin, D.F. (1990), The philosophical basis of peer review and the suppression of innovation. Journal of the American Medical Association, 263, pp. 1438–1441 |
| 4 | Bornmann, L. (2011), Scientific peer review. Annual Review of Information Science and Technology, 45, pp. 199–245 |
| 5 | Siegelman, S.S. (1991), Assassins and zealots: Variations in peer review. Radiology, 178, pp. 637–642 |
| 6 | Oppenheim, C. (1997), The correlation between citation counts and the 1992 research assessment exercise ratings for British research in genetics, anatomy and archaeology. Journal of Documentation, 53, pp. 477–487 |
| 7 | Crane, D. (1967), The gatekeepers of science: Some factors affecting the selection of articles for scientific journals. American Sociologist, 32, pp. 195–201 |
| 8 | Ingelfinger, F.J. (1974), Peer review in biomedical publication. Am J Med, 56, pp. 686–692 |
| 9 | Peters, D.P., Ceci, S.J. (1982), Peer-review practices of psychological journals: The fate of published articles, submitted again. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 5, pp. 187–255 |
| 10 | Cole, S., Cole, J.R., Simon, G.A. (1981), Chance and consensus in peer review. Science, 214, pp. 881–886 |
| 11 | Cronin, B., McKenzie, G. (1992), The trajectory of rejection. Journal of Documentation, 48 (3), pp. 310–317 |
| 12 | Starbuck, W.H. 2003), Turning lemons into lemonade: Where is the value in peer reviews? Journal of Management Inquiry, 12, pp. 344–351 |
| 13 | Wenneras, C., Wold, A. (1997), Nepotism and sexism in peer-review. Nature, 387, pp. 341–343 |
| 14 | Lawrence, P.A. (2003), The politics of publication. Nature, 422, pp. 259–261 |
| 15 | Travis, G.D.L., Collins, H.M. (1991), New light on old boys: Cognitive and institutional particularism in the peer review system. Science, Technology, & Human Values, 16 (3), pp. 322–341 |
| 16 | Burnham, J.C. (1990), The evolution of editorial peer review. JAMA, 263, pp. 1323–1329 |
| 17 | Van Raan, A.F.J. (2006), Comparison of the Hirsch-index with standard bibliometric indicators and with peer judgment for 147 chemistry research groups. Scientometrics, 67 (3), pp. 491–502 |
| 18 | Aksnes, D.W., Taxt, R.E. (2004), Peer reviews and bibliometric indicators: A comparative study at a Norwegian university. Research Evaluation, 13 (1), pp. 33–41 |
| 19 | Rothwell, P.M., Martyn, C.N. (2000), Reproducibility of peer review in clinical neuroscience: Is agreement between reviewers any greater than would be expected by chance alone? Brain, 123, pp. 1964–1969 |
| 20 | Seng, L.B., Willett, P. (1995), The citedness of publications by United Kingdom library schools. Journal of Information Science, 21 (1), pp. 68–71 |