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Peer Review Quality and Transparency of the Peer-Review Process in Open Access and Subscription Journals
- Source :
- PLOS ONE, 11(1):e0147913. PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, Vol 11, Iss 1, p e0147913 (2016)
- Publication Year :
- 2016
- Publisher :
- Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2016.
-
Abstract
- BackgroundRecent controversies highlighting substandard peer review in Open Access (OA) and traditional (subscription) journals have increased the need for authors, funders, publishers, and institutions to assure quality of peer-review in academic journals. I propose that transparency of the peer-review process may be seen as an indicator of the quality of peer-review, and develop and validate a tool enabling different stakeholders to assess transparency of the peer-review process.Methods and FindingsBased on editorial guidelines and best practices, I developed a 14-item tool to rate transparency of the peer-review process on the basis of journals’ websites. In Study 1, a random sample of 231 authors of papers in 92 subscription journals in different fields rated transparency of the journals that published their work. Authors’ ratings of the transparency were positively associated with quality of the peer-review process but unrelated to journal’s impact factors. In Study 2, 20 experts on OA publishing assessed the transparency of established (non-OA) journals, OA journals categorized as being published by potential predatory publishers, and journals from the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ). Results show high reliability across items (α = .91) and sufficient reliability across raters. Ratings differentiated the three types of journals well. In Study 3, academic librarians rated a random sample of 140 DOAJ journals and another 54 journals that had received a hoax paper written by Bohannon to test peer-review quality. Journals with higher transparency ratings were less likely to accept the flawed paper and showed higher impact as measured by the h5 indexfrom Google Scholar.ConclusionsThe tool to assess transparency of the peer-review process at academic journals shows promising reliability and validity. The transparency of the peer-review process can be seen as an indicator of peer-review quality allowing the tool to be used to predict academic quality in new journals.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Research Validity
Biomedical Research
lcsh:Medicine
Publication Ethics
Analytical Chemistry
Open Science
Librarians
Medicine
lcsh:Science
GeneralLiterature_REFERENCE(e.g.,dictionaries,encyclopedias,glossaries)
Research Integrity
media_common
Multidisciplinary
05 social sciences
Research Assessment
Public relations
Professions
Chemistry
Publishing
Physical Sciences
Periodicals as Topic
050904 information & library sciences
Editorial Policies
Research Article
Quality Control
Science Policy
Best practice
media_common.quotation_subject
MEDLINE
Bibliometrics
Research and Analysis Methods
Access to Information
Open Access
03 medical and health sciences
Chemical Analysis
Humans
Quality (business)
Scientific Publishing
Research ethics
business.industry
lcsh:R
Transparency (behavior)
030104 developmental biology
People and Places
lcsh:Q
Population Groupings
0509 other social sciences
business
Publication Practices
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19326203
- Volume :
- 11
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- PLOS ONE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....ea7cc17c6ac9172d3acc197df9df1797