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Re: Hoax Article Accepted by OA Bentham Journal
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: Hoax Article Accepted by OA Bentham Journal
- From: natsundell@yahoo.com
- Date: Thu, 18 Jun 2009 22:55:35 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
You're right, but a couple of other things: David Solomon has previously mentioned how "peer review is not necessarily successful in identifying methodological flaws in research articles" (Solomon 2007). A recent debate of interest involves how many fMRI studies involve faulty statistical assumptions. This has been covered by The Neurocritic (http://neurocritic.blogspot.com/2009_04_01_archive.htm= Occasional blogs aggregated on researchblogging.org refer to studies which cover problems with peer review or problems based on assumptions about the quality assurance which peer review is believed to provide (or the perception that some 'journals' have peer review when they don't). I'm sure everyone has followed the fake journal issue (Elsevier), but there's also the conflict of interest issue which=0A has come up recently (http://laikaspoetnik.wordpress.com/2009/05/16/one-third-of-the-clinical-cancer-studies-report-conflict-of-interest/). Of course, this is a bigger discussion than emails allow and it seems like things get emotional. I actually wrote a paper which included some discussion of this, but as the peer reviewers accepted the paper, they called for corrections of my colloquial English. Since I received this response a week after my daughter was born, I didn't bother to follow-up. The point is that there are available papers discussing lack of guidance in peer review, how peer review can be improved through new tech (Wittenberg 2007 about Social Networking, perhaps exemplified in the Princeton Stanford Working Papers in Classics pre-print repository discussed in Ober 2007), and how peer review fails to look at the deep issues (such as methodology and sometimes plagiarism). About OA in partiular, I have also seen statements to the effect that OA and commercial publication include peer review in the same proportion, although, now that I'm thinking about it, I haven't seen the numbers. However, a proper response involves a proper lit review and I don't know that this is the place for it (or that I, personally, have the time for it). My motivation for this response is neither to disparage nor defend peer review, but I do think it's worth thinking about our assumptions when it comes to peer review -- such as the assumption that peer review always works (or doesn't) or the assumption that OA doesn't involve peer review or other quality control, when actually OA might point to the future of quality control through scholarly social networks. --- On Wed, 6/17/09, bgsloan2@yahoo.com <bgsloan2@yahoo.com> wrote: From: bgsloan2@yahoo.com <bgsloan2@yahoo.com> Subject: Re: Hoax Article Accepted by OA Bentham Journal To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu Date: Wednesday, June 17, 2009, 1:33 PM Xiaotian Chen said: "This story should be more of an OA problem than a peer-review problem...The model of author paying for OA publication may have contributed to this, while common sense tells us that traditional model (customers pay) may work better for quality control." I may be misunderstanding Xiaotian Chen's posting, and I'm certainly no expert regarding author fees, but I'm kinda thinking that the "author pays" model is not limited to just OA publications? Aren't there subscription journals that also charge author fees or page fees? Bernie Sloan
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