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番茄影院 report reveals peer review capacity not used to its full potential聽聽

14 May 2024 by Faye Holst State of Peer Review 2024 report 番茄影院 launches 'State of Peer Review 2024' report.

A new global study from 番茄影院 (IOPP) has found that certain peer review communities continue to feel overburdened by reviewer requests, while others remain underrepresented.     
 
The survey, which generated over 3,000 responses from peer reviewers from across the globe, revealed regional and career-stage disparities:  

  • 30% of reviewers from high-income countries indicated that they receive too many peer review requests, compared with just 10% from low and middle-income countries*  
  • Just 6% of respondents from China and 7% from India indicated that they receive too many requests, compared with 23% of respondents globally 
  • 28% of senior researchers say they receive too many requests, compared to just 7% of PhD students and 9% of postdocs  

Laura Feetham-Walker, Reviewer Engagement Manager at IOPP, said: 鈥淎s research outputs increase globally, the demands on peer reviewers also increase. The pressures can be eased by tapping into the groups that are currently underused, which in turn brings different viewpoints and expertise. It鈥檚 also important to acknowledge that peer review can be a daunting task for those with little or no experience in the process, which is why we offer free peer review training and certification tailored for the physical sciences. Casting the net wider when looking for potential reviewers and helping to boost peer review confidence are just some of the ways we鈥檙e working to address the global imbalance.聽聽聽

鈥淨uality peer review is essential to the integrity and validity of science and relies on reviewers who are engaged, motivated and competent at providing constructive feedback. The insights we gain from this survey helps us to ensure we can continue to evolve the support we provide to the global reviewer community to help with their important work.鈥 

Other findings from the survey show that just over half of reviewers (52%) prefer to review double-anonymous manuscripts where the identity of both authors and reviewers are concealed. IOPP introduced this approach in 2021 to tackle the significant gender, racial and geographical under-representation in the scholarly publishing process. The predominant peer review approach in the physical sciences hitherto has been single-anonymous.聽聽

IOPP鈥檚 ‘State of peer review 2024鈥 report provides rich and practical insights that will help improve the efficiency and quality of the peer review process.鈥

To read the full report, click 丑别谤别.听听

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