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Author Topic: I don't know how to peer-review  (Read 4134 times)
drscot
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« Reply #30 on: January 31, 2012, 05:59:17 AM »

It's your job to be honest, otherwise peer review is pretty pointless. If you are honest and fair, and the outcome is negative, then a grown-up should be able to handle it.
... I've just been asked to review something that is far outside my area of expertise. I have no idea how they came up with my name, and probably shouldn't have agreed to it, but I suppose I'll just have to do my best.

If this is a journal that's fairly specific in its focus, and not very relevant for you, it is OK to politely decline. If it is a broad journal, then often editors will pick one or two reviewers who are specialists in the paper's focus, and one who represents the "general readership". The latter often give reviews that help the paper become more accessible and easily cited, which benefits the author and the journal...
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polly_mer
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hiding out from my grading. Shhh!


« Reply #31 on: January 31, 2012, 08:12:21 AM »

It's your job to be honest, otherwise peer review is pretty pointless. If you are honest and fair, and the outcome is negative, then a grown-up should be able to handle it.
... I've just been asked to review something that is far outside my area of expertise. I have no idea how they came up with my name, and probably shouldn't have agreed to it, but I suppose I'll just have to do my best.

If this is a journal that's fairly specific in its focus, and not very relevant for you, it is OK to politely decline. If it is a broad journal, then often editors will pick one or two reviewers who are specialists in the paper's focus, and one who represents the "general readership". The latter often give reviews that help the paper become more accessible and easily cited, which benefits the author and the journal...

This.  It's ok to read a submission and say, "You know, I am not right for this after all.  Please find someone else".  However, you should do that within a day or so of getting the article, not waiting the full allotted time and then saying it.
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If you haven't got either the anatomical or metaphorical balls to post your own question on a pseudonymous internet forum, then academia is the wrong job for you.
zyzzx
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« Reply #32 on: January 31, 2012, 08:57:31 AM »

It's your job to be honest, otherwise peer review is pretty pointless. If you are honest and fair, and the outcome is negative, then a grown-up should be able to handle it.
... I've just been asked to review something that is far outside my area of expertise. I have no idea how they came up with my name, and probably shouldn't have agreed to it, but I suppose I'll just have to do my best.

If this is a journal that's fairly specific in its focus, and not very relevant for you, it is OK to politely decline. If it is a broad journal, then often editors will pick one or two reviewers who are specialists in the paper's focus, and one who represents the "general readership". The latter often give reviews that help the paper become more accessible and easily cited, which benefits the author and the journal...

This.  It's ok to read a submission and say, "You know, I am not right for this after all.  Please find someone else".  However, you should do that within a day or so of getting the article, not waiting the full allotted time and then saying it.
I know I could have declined it - it was a bit of a panic decision. I was on vacation, sitting in an internet cafe after having not checked email in days, and saw both the original email and the "reminder, late response to invitation" email. I glanced at the abstract, thought hmmm, looks interesting, what the hell, and clicked accept. I've also never reviewed for this journal before, and thought it'd be nice to add another to my repertoire.
The "general readership" aspect is a good point, and a good angle to approach the review from, thanks. It is a broad journal, and the paper is very interdisciplinary, so maybe they are looking for people from both sides. I do know the geographical area very well, and have some expertise on one of the arguments, so it's not completely out to lunch. Maybe I'm meant to be the reality check for that line of argument, even though the broader question is not really my field.
I do always find it interesting to try to figure out how I got landed with certain papers. Some are obvious - I was cited, or I know the editor, or it's firmly in my area of expertise. This one is a bit of a puzzle...
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polly_mer
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hiding out from my grading. Shhh!


« Reply #33 on: January 31, 2012, 12:03:40 PM »

I do always find it interesting to try to figure out how I got landed with certain papers. Some are obvious - I was cited, or I know the editor, or it's firmly in my area of expertise. This one is a bit of a puzzle...
I've been getting reviewer invitations recently that seem very likely as a result of someone going down the list of recent reviewers and hoping someone will say yes since the extremely qualified people were unavailable.
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If you haven't got either the anatomical or metaphorical balls to post your own question on a pseudonymous internet forum, then academia is the wrong job for you.
powergarden
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« Reply #34 on: February 01, 2012, 09:06:46 PM »

One other resource that might be helpful if you'd like to look at examples of reviewer comments is the BioMed Central Journals. They provide a "Pre-publication history" of each article where the public can view the original submission, all subsequent revisions, and all of the reviewer reports. They even identify the names of each of the reviewers. The links to the pre-publication history are available at the end of the html versions of each article. Here is one example from BMC Public Health:  
http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/11/930/prepub

Note that the pre-publication history is not available for articles that have been recently posted and only have the provisional PDF available.
« Last Edit: February 01, 2012, 09:07:38 PM by powergarden » Logged
oldfullprof
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Representation is not reproduction!


« Reply #35 on: February 02, 2012, 09:58:10 AM »

I can't tell you how many things I find wrong with this.
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Someone please tell me to start entering data, rather than screwing off here.
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