| Literature DB >> 30858990 |
Tony Ross-Hellauer1, Edit Görögh2.
Abstract
Open peer review (OPR) is moving into the mainstream, but it is often poorly understood and surveys of researcher attitudes show important barriers to implementation. As more journals move to implement and experiment with the myriad of innovations covered by this term, there is a clear need for best practice guidelines to guide implementation. This brief article aims to address this knowledge gap, reporting work based on an interactive stakeholder workshop to create best-practice guidelines for editors and journals who wish to transition to OPR. Although the advice is aimed mainly at editors and publishers of scientific journals, since this is the area in which OPR is at its most mature, many of the principles may also be applicable for the implementation of OPR in other areas (e.g., books, conference submissions).Entities:
Keywords: Guidelines; Open peer review; Open science; Peer review; Scholarly publishing
Year: 2019 PMID: 30858990 PMCID: PMC6394088 DOI: 10.1186/s41073-019-0063-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Res Integr Peer Rev ISSN: 2058-8615
Fig. 1Screenshot of example published peer review report on F1000Research [22]
Fig. 2Screenshot of comment threads of open participation, pre-publication community discussion on an article in the Copernicus journal Biogeosciences https://www.biogeosciences.net/15/4955/2018/bg-15-4955-2018-discussion.html
| Item | Guideline | Completed |
| General advice | ||
| A) Set your open peer review goal(s) | ||
| A1. | Decide what you’d like to achieve with OPR | |
| A2. | Acquaint yourself with the differences between the elements of OPR | |
| A3. | Decide which elements you would like to implement | |
| B) Listen to research communities | ||
| B1. | Be conscious of, and sensitive to, community differences | |
| B2. | Consider surveying community opinions | |
| B3 | Communicate your goal with the stakeholders and research community | |
| C) Plan technologies and costs | ||
| C1. | Assess technological feasibility of various options | |
| C2. | Assess the costs of various options | |
| C3. | Consider work-around options for piloting | |
| D) Be pragmatic in your approach | ||
| D1. | Set priorities and consider a phased approach | |
| D2. | Consider making options optional or piloting them first | |
| E) Further communicate the concept | ||
| E1. | Engage the community, especially via “open champions” | |
| E2. | Be aware that communication is key and terminology is important | |
| F) Evaluate performance | ||
| F1. | Have a clear framework for assessing success | |
| F2. | Accept that change takes time, but adjust if necessary | |
| F3. | Share your results with the community | |
| Trait-specific advice | ||
| G) Open identities | ||
| G1. | Devise strategies to compensate for the possibility that open identities might make it harder to find reviewers | |
| G2. | Be alert to possible negative interactions and have a workflow for dealing with them | |
| G3. | Enable credit | |
| G4. | Consider piloting or making open identities optional | |
| H) Open reports | ||
| H1. | Meet industry best-practice for publishing review reports | |
| H2. | Be aware of potential challenges in publishing reports | |
| I) Open participation, pre-review manuscripts & open final version commenting | ||
| I1. | Decide who can comment | |
| I2. | Consider how to foster uptake | |
| J) Open interaction | ||
| J1. | Decide which workflow to enable | |
| J2. | Be alert to how this may affect editorial workloads | |