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Re: The religion of peer review



The real problem isn't the religion of peer review. It's the religion of libraries feeling they have to buy expensive subscriptions solely because Eminent Professor X of their school publishes in that journal. OR How many of us have heard, for example, the plea of a department (usually with no supporting documents) "You must take journal X because my discipline requires it for us to be accredited." ? The problem isn't really peer-review (or even the greed of the publishing combines), but our own selfishness in insisting that our institutions just have to have journals -- even when our own data shows the journals won't be used.

Quoting Libby Feil <l.feil@sjcpl.org>:

I've seen much discussion of this topic recently, in part because of
the stem cell research debacle, but I have to agree that peer review
usually does "work."  I think that the real problem is that many
people do not understand what peer review is meant to accomplish.  It
is not a defense against outright fraud, because peer reviewers read
journal articles, not researchers' notebooks. However, what it can do
and usually in fact does quite well is point out errors in results or
methodologies, weaknesses in arguments, and unwarranted conclusions.
As someone who has worked in a journal's editorial office and also
has submitted work for peer review, I can attest personally to the
usefulness and thoroughness of most peer review. In my view, this
great gift of unpaid labor is a great service to the research
community.

Elizabeth "Libby" Feil

Reference Librarian and Assistant Manager
Reference & Information Services Department
St. Joseph County Public Library
304 So. Main Street
South Bend, IN  46601

574-235-4181
l.feil@sjcpl.org
AIM:  sjcpllibby
http://www.libraryforlife.org/localhistory


From: Stevan Harnad <harnad@ecs.soton.ac.uk>
To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Subject: Re: The religion of peer review
Date: Wed, 22 Feb 2006 15:50:12 EST

Peer review is just qualified specialists vetting the work of
their fellow-specialists before further specialists risk the time
and effort of trying to build on it. Sometimes it's about
protecting the public from health risk.

A religion - Anyone have a better idea? No vetting? Unqualified
vetting? Opinion polls? Pot luck?

No one who has had to sit for a quarter century in a journal
editorial office dealing with raw, unfiltered submissions has any
doubt about the value, indeed the necessity, of qualified,
answerable vetting, to protect researchers time and effort; but
armchair speculation about it will no doubt proceed apace...
--



--
Karl Bridges
Associate Professor
Information and Instruction Services
Bailey Howe Library
University of Vermont
538 Main St.
Burlington, VT  05405
802-656-8132
karl.bridges@uvm.edu <mailto:karl.bridges@uvm.edu>



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