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2012 journal review Front Comput Neurosci

Learning from open source software projects to improve scientific review

Ghosh SS, Klein A, Avants B, Millman KJ

Identifiers and access

DOI
10.3389/fncom.2012.00018
PubMed
22529798
PMC
PMC3328792
PDF
Open-access copy →
Cited by
27

Key findings

This perspective draws on open-source software practices and social networking to propose an interactive scientific-review model that distributes reviews, exposes methods and materials, credits and quantifies reviewers, and supports evolving post-publication dialogue.

Abstract

Source: pubmed

Peer-reviewed publications are the primary mechanism for sharing scientific results. The current peer-review process is, however, fraught with many problems that undermine the pace, validity, and credibility of science. We highlight five salient problems: (1) reviewers are expected to have comprehensive expertise; (2) reviewers do not have sufficient access to methods and materials to evaluate a study; (3) reviewers are neither identified nor acknowledged; (4) there is no measure of the quality of a review; and (5) reviews take a lot of time, and once submitted cannot evolve. We propose that these problems can be resolved by making the following changes to the review process. Distributing reviews to many reviewers would allow each reviewer to focus on portions of the article that reflect the reviewer's specialty or area of interest and place less of a burden on any one reviewer. Providing reviewers materials and methods to perform comprehensive evaluation would facilitate transparency, greater scrutiny, and replication of results. Acknowledging reviewers makes it possible to quantitatively assess reviewer contributions, which could be used to establish the impact of the reviewer in the scientific community. Quantifying review quality could help establish the importance of individual reviews and reviewers as well as the submitted article. Finally, we recommend expediting post-publication reviews and allowing for the dialog to continue and flourish in a dynamic and interactive manner. We argue that these solutions can be implemented by adapting existing features from open-source software management and social networking technologies. We propose a model of an open, interactive review system that quantifies the significance of articles, the quality of reviews, and the reputation of reviewers.

Topics

  • reproducibility-tooling

Lab authors

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