SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 21
Peer reviewer training
part I:
What do we know about peer review?
Dr Trish Groves
Deputy editor, BMJ
What do editors want from papers?
• Importance
• Originality
• Relevance to readers
• Usefulness to readers and, ultimately, to
patients
• Truth
• Excitement/ “wow” factor
• Clear and engaging writing
Peer review
• As many processes as journals or grant giving
bodies
• No operational definition--usually implies
“external review”
• Largely unstudied till 1990s
• Benefits through improving what’s published
rather than sorting wheat from chaff
What is peer review?
• Review by peers
• Includes:
internal review (by editorial staff)
external review (by experts in the field)
BMJ papers
• All manuscripts handled by our online editorial
office at http://submit.bmj.com
• The website uses a system called Benchpress
• Reviewers recruited by invitation, through
volunteering, and by authors’ suggestions
• Database also includes all authors
• We monitor reviewers’ workload for BMJ
• We rate reviewers’ reports using a 3 point scale
BMJ peer review process I
• 7000 research papers, 7% accepted
• approximate numbers at each stage:
– 1000 rejected by one editor within 48 hours
– further 3000 rejected with second editor
– within one week of submission 3000 read by senior
editor; further 1500 rejected
– 1500 sent to two reviewers; then 500 more rejected
– approx 1000 screened by clinical epidemiology editor
and more rejected
BMJ peer review process II
• 400-500 to weekly manuscript meeting attended by the
Editor, an external editorial adviser (a specialist or
primary care doctor) and a statistician..
• …and the full team of BMJ research editors, plus the
BMJ clinical epidemiology editor
• 350 research articles accepted, usually after revision
• value added by commissioned editorials and
commentaries
BMJ peer review process III
• always willing to consider first appeals--but
must revise the paper, respond to criticisms,
not just say subject’s important
• perhaps 20% accepted on appeal
• no second appeals; always ends in tears;
plenty of other journals
What we know about
peer review
Research evidence
Peer review processes
• “Stand at the top of the stairs with a pile of
papers and throw them down the stairs. Those
that reach the bottom are published.”
• “Sort the papers into two piles: those to be
published and those to be rejected. Then swap
them over.”
Some problems
• Means different things at different journals
• Slow
• Expensive
• Subjective
• Biased
• Open to abuse
• Poor at detecting errors
• Almost useless at detecting fraud
Is peer review reliable?
(How often do two reviewers agree?)
NEJM (Ingelfinger F 1974)
• Rates of agreement only “moderately better than chance”
(Kappa = 0.26)
• Agreement greater for rejection than acceptance
Grant review
• Cole et al, 1981 – real vs sham panel, agreed on 75% of
decisions
• Hodgson C, 1997 – two real panels reviewing the same
grants, 73% agreement
Are two reviewers enough?
• Fletcher and Fletcher 1999 - need at least six reviewers,
all favouring rejection or acceptance, to yield a stats
significant conclusion (p<0.05)
Should we mind if reviewers don’t
agree?
• Very high reliability might mean that all
reviewers think the same
• Reviewers may be chosen for differing positions
or areas of expertise
• Peer review decisions are like diagnostic tests:
false positives and false negatives are inevitable
(Kassirer and Campion, 1994)
• Larger journals ask reviewers to advise on
publication, not to decide
Bias
Author-related
• Prestige (author/institution)
• Gender
• Where they live and work
Paper-related
• Positive results
• English language
Prestigious institution bias
Peters and Ceci, 1982
Resubmitted 12 altered articles to psychology journals that
had already published them
Changed:
• title/abstract/introduction - only slightly
• authors’ names
• name of institution, from prestigious to unknown
fictitious name (eg. “Tri-Valley Center for Human
Potential”)
Peters and Ceci - results
• Three articles recognised as resubmissions
• One accepted
• Eight rejected (all because of poor study
design, inadequate statistical analysis, or poor
quality: none on grounds of lack of originality)
How easy is it to hide authors’ identity?
• Not easy
• In RCTs of blinded peer review, reviewers
correctly identified author or institution in 24-
50% of cases
Reviewers identified
(open review) – results of RCTs
Asking reviewers to sign their reports
in RCTs made no difference to the quality
of reviews or recommendations made
• Godlee et al, 1998
• van Rooyen et al, 1998
• van Rooyen et al ,1999
Open review on the web
Various experiments and evaluations are
underway…
What makes a good reviewer? – results of
RCTs
• Aged under 40
• Good institution
• Methodological training (statistics &
epidemiology)
What might improve the quality of reviews?
• Reward/credit/acknowledgement?
• Careful selection?
• Training?
• Greater accountability (open review on web)?
• Interaction between author and reviewer (real
time open review)?

More Related Content

Similar to presentation-1what-do-we-know-about-peer-review.ppt

Virtual training on Academic publishing
Virtual training on Academic publishing Virtual training on Academic publishing
Virtual training on Academic publishing fratanya
 
Workshop -- How to successfully write a scientific paper?
Workshop -- How to successfully write a scientific paper?Workshop -- How to successfully write a scientific paper?
Workshop -- How to successfully write a scientific paper?KnihovnaUTB
 
Open Peer Review- Benefits and Concerns
Open Peer Review- Benefits and ConcernsOpen Peer Review- Benefits and Concerns
Open Peer Review- Benefits and ConcernsLaurie Goodman
 
Module_3.pdf
Module_3.pdfModule_3.pdf
Module_3.pdfDorothyJ2
 
Publish or Perish - A guide to submitting papers for peer-reviewed publication
Publish or Perish - A guide to submitting papers for peer-reviewed publicationPublish or Perish - A guide to submitting papers for peer-reviewed publication
Publish or Perish - A guide to submitting papers for peer-reviewed publicationIan Brown
 
Approaches to Peer Review
Approaches to Peer ReviewApproaches to Peer Review
Approaches to Peer ReviewMartyn Rittman
 
Manuscript development workshop
Manuscript development workshopManuscript development workshop
Manuscript development workshopSgbed
 
Publishing in academic journals medicine and health
Publishing in academic journals medicine and healthPublishing in academic journals medicine and health
Publishing in academic journals medicine and healthuoblibraries
 
What makes a REF paper REF-able?
What makes a REF paper REF-able?What makes a REF paper REF-able?
What makes a REF paper REF-able?Roger Watson
 
How to Become More Involved in Peer Review
How to Become More Involved in Peer ReviewHow to Become More Involved in Peer Review
How to Become More Involved in Peer ReviewOARSI
 
how_to_get_published_-_eifl_training.pptx
how_to_get_published_-_eifl_training.pptxhow_to_get_published_-_eifl_training.pptx
how_to_get_published_-_eifl_training.pptxssuseraf1f22
 
Humans, AI and Decisions Making - 3 - What are the editorial questions AI can...
Humans, AI and Decisions Making - 3 - What are the editorial questions AI can...Humans, AI and Decisions Making - 3 - What are the editorial questions AI can...
Humans, AI and Decisions Making - 3 - What are the editorial questions AI can...phillbjones
 

Similar to presentation-1what-do-we-know-about-peer-review.ppt (20)

Virtual training on Academic publishing
Virtual training on Academic publishing Virtual training on Academic publishing
Virtual training on Academic publishing
 
Publishing: Everything you wanted to know but were afraid to ask
Publishing: Everything you wanted to know but were afraid to askPublishing: Everything you wanted to know but were afraid to ask
Publishing: Everything you wanted to know but were afraid to ask
 
Workshop -- How to successfully write a scientific paper?
Workshop -- How to successfully write a scientific paper?Workshop -- How to successfully write a scientific paper?
Workshop -- How to successfully write a scientific paper?
 
Open Peer Review- Benefits and Concerns
Open Peer Review- Benefits and ConcernsOpen Peer Review- Benefits and Concerns
Open Peer Review- Benefits and Concerns
 
Future of peer review
Future of peer reviewFuture of peer review
Future of peer review
 
Module_3.pdf
Module_3.pdfModule_3.pdf
Module_3.pdf
 
Publish or Perish - A guide to submitting papers for peer-reviewed publication
Publish or Perish - A guide to submitting papers for peer-reviewed publicationPublish or Perish - A guide to submitting papers for peer-reviewed publication
Publish or Perish - A guide to submitting papers for peer-reviewed publication
 
Approaches to Peer Review
Approaches to Peer ReviewApproaches to Peer Review
Approaches to Peer Review
 
Manuscript development workshop
Manuscript development workshopManuscript development workshop
Manuscript development workshop
 
Theoretical Issues - Intro to Quantitative
Theoretical Issues - Intro to Quantitative Theoretical Issues - Intro to Quantitative
Theoretical Issues - Intro to Quantitative
 
Writing a Research Paper.pptx
Writing a Research Paper.pptxWriting a Research Paper.pptx
Writing a Research Paper.pptx
 
Publishing in academic journals medicine and health
Publishing in academic journals medicine and healthPublishing in academic journals medicine and health
Publishing in academic journals medicine and health
 
Journal knowhows
Journal  knowhows Journal  knowhows
Journal knowhows
 
What makes a REF paper REF-able?
What makes a REF paper REF-able?What makes a REF paper REF-able?
What makes a REF paper REF-able?
 
Thesis presentation
Thesis presentationThesis presentation
Thesis presentation
 
Evidence based practice
Evidence based practiceEvidence based practice
Evidence based practice
 
Scopus Journals
Scopus JournalsScopus Journals
Scopus Journals
 
How to Become More Involved in Peer Review
How to Become More Involved in Peer ReviewHow to Become More Involved in Peer Review
How to Become More Involved in Peer Review
 
how_to_get_published_-_eifl_training.pptx
how_to_get_published_-_eifl_training.pptxhow_to_get_published_-_eifl_training.pptx
how_to_get_published_-_eifl_training.pptx
 
Humans, AI and Decisions Making - 3 - What are the editorial questions AI can...
Humans, AI and Decisions Making - 3 - What are the editorial questions AI can...Humans, AI and Decisions Making - 3 - What are the editorial questions AI can...
Humans, AI and Decisions Making - 3 - What are the editorial questions AI can...
 

Recently uploaded

slides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptx
slides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptxslides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptx
slides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptxCapitolTechU
 
Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45
Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45
Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45MysoreMuleSoftMeetup
 
Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...
Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...
Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...Denish Jangid
 
INU_CAPSTONEDESIGN_비밀번호486_업로드용 발표자료.pdf
INU_CAPSTONEDESIGN_비밀번호486_업로드용 발표자료.pdfINU_CAPSTONEDESIGN_비밀번호486_업로드용 발표자료.pdf
INU_CAPSTONEDESIGN_비밀번호486_업로드용 발표자료.pdfbu07226
 
The Ball Poem- John Berryman_20240518_001617_0000.pptx
The Ball Poem- John Berryman_20240518_001617_0000.pptxThe Ball Poem- John Berryman_20240518_001617_0000.pptx
The Ball Poem- John Berryman_20240518_001617_0000.pptxNehaChandwani11
 
Morse OER Some Benefits and Challenges.pptx
Morse OER Some Benefits and Challenges.pptxMorse OER Some Benefits and Challenges.pptx
Morse OER Some Benefits and Challenges.pptxjmorse8
 
How to Analyse Profit of a Sales Order in Odoo 17
How to Analyse Profit of a Sales Order in Odoo 17How to Analyse Profit of a Sales Order in Odoo 17
How to Analyse Profit of a Sales Order in Odoo 17Celine George
 
Application of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matrices
Application of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matricesApplication of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matrices
Application of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matricesRased Khan
 
ppt your views.ppt your views of your college in your eyes
ppt your views.ppt your views of your college in your eyesppt your views.ppt your views of your college in your eyes
ppt your views.ppt your views of your college in your eyesashishpaul799
 
Stl Algorithms in C++ jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj
Stl Algorithms in C++ jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjStl Algorithms in C++ jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj
Stl Algorithms in C++ jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjMohammed Sikander
 
Envelope of Discrepancy in Orthodontics: Enhancing Precision in Treatment
 Envelope of Discrepancy in Orthodontics: Enhancing Precision in Treatment Envelope of Discrepancy in Orthodontics: Enhancing Precision in Treatment
Envelope of Discrepancy in Orthodontics: Enhancing Precision in Treatmentsaipooja36
 
size separation d pharm 1st year pharmaceutics
size separation d pharm 1st year pharmaceuticssize separation d pharm 1st year pharmaceutics
size separation d pharm 1st year pharmaceuticspragatimahajan3
 
The Last Leaf, a short story by O. Henry
The Last Leaf, a short story by O. HenryThe Last Leaf, a short story by O. Henry
The Last Leaf, a short story by O. HenryEugene Lysak
 
Behavioral-sciences-dr-mowadat rana (1).pdf
Behavioral-sciences-dr-mowadat rana (1).pdfBehavioral-sciences-dr-mowadat rana (1).pdf
Behavioral-sciences-dr-mowadat rana (1).pdfaedhbteg
 
2024_Student Session 2_ Set Plan Preparation.pptx
2024_Student Session 2_ Set Plan Preparation.pptx2024_Student Session 2_ Set Plan Preparation.pptx
2024_Student Session 2_ Set Plan Preparation.pptxmansk2
 
Discover the Dark Web .pdf InfosecTrain
Discover the Dark Web .pdf  InfosecTrainDiscover the Dark Web .pdf  InfosecTrain
Discover the Dark Web .pdf InfosecTraininfosec train
 
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptxThe basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptxheathfieldcps1
 
Open Educational Resources Primer PowerPoint
Open Educational Resources Primer PowerPointOpen Educational Resources Primer PowerPoint
Open Educational Resources Primer PowerPointELaRue0
 
Capitol Tech Univ Doctoral Presentation -May 2024
Capitol Tech Univ Doctoral Presentation -May 2024Capitol Tech Univ Doctoral Presentation -May 2024
Capitol Tech Univ Doctoral Presentation -May 2024CapitolTechU
 

Recently uploaded (20)

slides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptx
slides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptxslides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptx
slides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptx
 
Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45
Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45
Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45
 
Post Exam Fun(da) Intra UEM General Quiz - Finals.pdf
Post Exam Fun(da) Intra UEM General Quiz - Finals.pdfPost Exam Fun(da) Intra UEM General Quiz - Finals.pdf
Post Exam Fun(da) Intra UEM General Quiz - Finals.pdf
 
Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...
Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...
Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...
 
INU_CAPSTONEDESIGN_비밀번호486_업로드용 발표자료.pdf
INU_CAPSTONEDESIGN_비밀번호486_업로드용 발표자료.pdfINU_CAPSTONEDESIGN_비밀번호486_업로드용 발표자료.pdf
INU_CAPSTONEDESIGN_비밀번호486_업로드용 발표자료.pdf
 
The Ball Poem- John Berryman_20240518_001617_0000.pptx
The Ball Poem- John Berryman_20240518_001617_0000.pptxThe Ball Poem- John Berryman_20240518_001617_0000.pptx
The Ball Poem- John Berryman_20240518_001617_0000.pptx
 
Morse OER Some Benefits and Challenges.pptx
Morse OER Some Benefits and Challenges.pptxMorse OER Some Benefits and Challenges.pptx
Morse OER Some Benefits and Challenges.pptx
 
How to Analyse Profit of a Sales Order in Odoo 17
How to Analyse Profit of a Sales Order in Odoo 17How to Analyse Profit of a Sales Order in Odoo 17
How to Analyse Profit of a Sales Order in Odoo 17
 
Application of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matrices
Application of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matricesApplication of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matrices
Application of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matrices
 
ppt your views.ppt your views of your college in your eyes
ppt your views.ppt your views of your college in your eyesppt your views.ppt your views of your college in your eyes
ppt your views.ppt your views of your college in your eyes
 
Stl Algorithms in C++ jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj
Stl Algorithms in C++ jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjStl Algorithms in C++ jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj
Stl Algorithms in C++ jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj
 
Envelope of Discrepancy in Orthodontics: Enhancing Precision in Treatment
 Envelope of Discrepancy in Orthodontics: Enhancing Precision in Treatment Envelope of Discrepancy in Orthodontics: Enhancing Precision in Treatment
Envelope of Discrepancy in Orthodontics: Enhancing Precision in Treatment
 
size separation d pharm 1st year pharmaceutics
size separation d pharm 1st year pharmaceuticssize separation d pharm 1st year pharmaceutics
size separation d pharm 1st year pharmaceutics
 
The Last Leaf, a short story by O. Henry
The Last Leaf, a short story by O. HenryThe Last Leaf, a short story by O. Henry
The Last Leaf, a short story by O. Henry
 
Behavioral-sciences-dr-mowadat rana (1).pdf
Behavioral-sciences-dr-mowadat rana (1).pdfBehavioral-sciences-dr-mowadat rana (1).pdf
Behavioral-sciences-dr-mowadat rana (1).pdf
 
2024_Student Session 2_ Set Plan Preparation.pptx
2024_Student Session 2_ Set Plan Preparation.pptx2024_Student Session 2_ Set Plan Preparation.pptx
2024_Student Session 2_ Set Plan Preparation.pptx
 
Discover the Dark Web .pdf InfosecTrain
Discover the Dark Web .pdf  InfosecTrainDiscover the Dark Web .pdf  InfosecTrain
Discover the Dark Web .pdf InfosecTrain
 
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptxThe basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
 
Open Educational Resources Primer PowerPoint
Open Educational Resources Primer PowerPointOpen Educational Resources Primer PowerPoint
Open Educational Resources Primer PowerPoint
 
Capitol Tech Univ Doctoral Presentation -May 2024
Capitol Tech Univ Doctoral Presentation -May 2024Capitol Tech Univ Doctoral Presentation -May 2024
Capitol Tech Univ Doctoral Presentation -May 2024
 

presentation-1what-do-we-know-about-peer-review.ppt

  • 1. Peer reviewer training part I: What do we know about peer review? Dr Trish Groves Deputy editor, BMJ
  • 2. What do editors want from papers? • Importance • Originality • Relevance to readers • Usefulness to readers and, ultimately, to patients • Truth • Excitement/ “wow” factor • Clear and engaging writing
  • 3. Peer review • As many processes as journals or grant giving bodies • No operational definition--usually implies “external review” • Largely unstudied till 1990s • Benefits through improving what’s published rather than sorting wheat from chaff
  • 4. What is peer review? • Review by peers • Includes: internal review (by editorial staff) external review (by experts in the field)
  • 5. BMJ papers • All manuscripts handled by our online editorial office at http://submit.bmj.com • The website uses a system called Benchpress • Reviewers recruited by invitation, through volunteering, and by authors’ suggestions • Database also includes all authors • We monitor reviewers’ workload for BMJ • We rate reviewers’ reports using a 3 point scale
  • 6. BMJ peer review process I • 7000 research papers, 7% accepted • approximate numbers at each stage: – 1000 rejected by one editor within 48 hours – further 3000 rejected with second editor – within one week of submission 3000 read by senior editor; further 1500 rejected – 1500 sent to two reviewers; then 500 more rejected – approx 1000 screened by clinical epidemiology editor and more rejected
  • 7. BMJ peer review process II • 400-500 to weekly manuscript meeting attended by the Editor, an external editorial adviser (a specialist or primary care doctor) and a statistician.. • …and the full team of BMJ research editors, plus the BMJ clinical epidemiology editor • 350 research articles accepted, usually after revision • value added by commissioned editorials and commentaries
  • 8. BMJ peer review process III • always willing to consider first appeals--but must revise the paper, respond to criticisms, not just say subject’s important • perhaps 20% accepted on appeal • no second appeals; always ends in tears; plenty of other journals
  • 9. What we know about peer review Research evidence
  • 10. Peer review processes • “Stand at the top of the stairs with a pile of papers and throw them down the stairs. Those that reach the bottom are published.” • “Sort the papers into two piles: those to be published and those to be rejected. Then swap them over.”
  • 11. Some problems • Means different things at different journals • Slow • Expensive • Subjective • Biased • Open to abuse • Poor at detecting errors • Almost useless at detecting fraud
  • 12. Is peer review reliable? (How often do two reviewers agree?) NEJM (Ingelfinger F 1974) • Rates of agreement only “moderately better than chance” (Kappa = 0.26) • Agreement greater for rejection than acceptance Grant review • Cole et al, 1981 – real vs sham panel, agreed on 75% of decisions • Hodgson C, 1997 – two real panels reviewing the same grants, 73% agreement Are two reviewers enough? • Fletcher and Fletcher 1999 - need at least six reviewers, all favouring rejection or acceptance, to yield a stats significant conclusion (p<0.05)
  • 13. Should we mind if reviewers don’t agree? • Very high reliability might mean that all reviewers think the same • Reviewers may be chosen for differing positions or areas of expertise • Peer review decisions are like diagnostic tests: false positives and false negatives are inevitable (Kassirer and Campion, 1994) • Larger journals ask reviewers to advise on publication, not to decide
  • 14. Bias Author-related • Prestige (author/institution) • Gender • Where they live and work Paper-related • Positive results • English language
  • 15. Prestigious institution bias Peters and Ceci, 1982 Resubmitted 12 altered articles to psychology journals that had already published them Changed: • title/abstract/introduction - only slightly • authors’ names • name of institution, from prestigious to unknown fictitious name (eg. “Tri-Valley Center for Human Potential”)
  • 16. Peters and Ceci - results • Three articles recognised as resubmissions • One accepted • Eight rejected (all because of poor study design, inadequate statistical analysis, or poor quality: none on grounds of lack of originality)
  • 17. How easy is it to hide authors’ identity? • Not easy • In RCTs of blinded peer review, reviewers correctly identified author or institution in 24- 50% of cases
  • 18. Reviewers identified (open review) – results of RCTs Asking reviewers to sign their reports in RCTs made no difference to the quality of reviews or recommendations made • Godlee et al, 1998 • van Rooyen et al, 1998 • van Rooyen et al ,1999
  • 19. Open review on the web Various experiments and evaluations are underway…
  • 20. What makes a good reviewer? – results of RCTs • Aged under 40 • Good institution • Methodological training (statistics & epidemiology)
  • 21. What might improve the quality of reviews? • Reward/credit/acknowledgement? • Careful selection? • Training? • Greater accountability (open review on web)? • Interaction between author and reviewer (real time open review)?