« Peer review and standards in Pakistan journals | Main | Senate hearings on US agricultural research funding »

Bookmark in Connotea

Science Library Pad on soft and hard peer review

Richard Akerman, in a 2 March post on Science Library Pad entitled "Soft peer review", provides links to some interesting new reports on the subject. One is called "Social software and new opportunities for peer review", via Library 2.0; another is "Soft peer review? Social software and distributed scientific evaluation" via Academic Productivity blog.
Richard is one of the contributors to Nature's web focus on peer review, published last year and archived in full on Peer to Peer (it contains 22 articles, including Richard's, and remains open to comments from the community of peer-reviewers, authors and scientists).
In his Science Library Pad post, Richard concludes: "I do think the debate about "open" peer review vs. traditional peer review is a bit of a red herring, and it very much concerns me when people suggest that open review can replace traditional (or in the language of this posting "hard") peer review. We have already had open peer review for years, it's called preprint feedback, mailing lists, ArXiV, letters to the editor... it's a tremendous addition to, but not replacement for, the rigourous anonymous peer review system needed to provide a publication filter."

Post a comment

Comments will be reviewed by the blog editors before being published, mainly to ensure that spam and irrelevant material (such as product advertisements) are not published . Please keep your comment brief. Excessively long or offensively phrased entries will be edited. Remember this blog is for feedback and discussion of matters concerning scientific authorship or peer-review - not for drawing attention to your research.

If you want to know if a NPG journal would be interested in your research, you will need to contact the journal's editorial office, which can be done via the authors & referees website.

We strongly encourage you to use your real, full name. E-mail addresses are required in case we need to discuss your comment with you directly. We won't publish your e-mail address unless you request it.

Please enter the numbers you see below - this helps us to avoid spam. If you are having trouble with this system, you can send your comment by e-mail to 'referees at nature.com'.

please enter code