The missing metric: quantifying contributions of reviewers

The number of contributing reviewers often outnumbers the authors of publications. This has led to apathy towards reviewing and the conclusion that the peer-review system is broken. Given the trade-offs between submitting and reviewing manuscripts, reviewers and authors naturally want visibility for...

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Main Authors: Maurício Cantor, Shane Gero
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2015-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.140540
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spelling doaj-80d3b6e147f542329e933b163e6d24492020-11-25T03:52:37ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032015-01-012210.1098/rsos.140540140540The missing metric: quantifying contributions of reviewersMaurício CantorShane GeroThe number of contributing reviewers often outnumbers the authors of publications. This has led to apathy towards reviewing and the conclusion that the peer-review system is broken. Given the trade-offs between submitting and reviewing manuscripts, reviewers and authors naturally want visibility for their efforts. While study after study has called for revolutionizing publication practices, the current paradigm does not recognize reviewers' time and expertise. We propose the R-index as a simple way to quantify scientists' contributions as reviewers. We modelled its performance using simulations based on real data to show that early–mid career scientists, who complete high-quality reviews of longer manuscripts within their field, can perform as well as leading scientists reviewing only for high-impact journals. By giving citeable academic recognition for reviewing, R-index will encourage more participation with better reviews, regardless of the career stage. Moreover, the R-index will allow editors to exploit scores to manage and improve their review team, and for journals to promote high average scores as signals of a practical and efficient service to authors. Peer-review is a pervasive necessity across disciplines and the simple utility of this missing metric will credit a valuable aspect of academic productivity without having to revolutionize the current peer-review system.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.140540peer-reviewpublication practicesscience policyindexscience metricsresearch assessment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maurício Cantor
Shane Gero
spellingShingle Maurício Cantor
Shane Gero
The missing metric: quantifying contributions of reviewers
Royal Society Open Science
peer-review
publication practices
science policy
index
science metrics
research assessment
author_facet Maurício Cantor
Shane Gero
author_sort Maurício Cantor
title The missing metric: quantifying contributions of reviewers
title_short The missing metric: quantifying contributions of reviewers
title_full The missing metric: quantifying contributions of reviewers
title_fullStr The missing metric: quantifying contributions of reviewers
title_full_unstemmed The missing metric: quantifying contributions of reviewers
title_sort missing metric: quantifying contributions of reviewers
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2015-01-01
description The number of contributing reviewers often outnumbers the authors of publications. This has led to apathy towards reviewing and the conclusion that the peer-review system is broken. Given the trade-offs between submitting and reviewing manuscripts, reviewers and authors naturally want visibility for their efforts. While study after study has called for revolutionizing publication practices, the current paradigm does not recognize reviewers' time and expertise. We propose the R-index as a simple way to quantify scientists' contributions as reviewers. We modelled its performance using simulations based on real data to show that early–mid career scientists, who complete high-quality reviews of longer manuscripts within their field, can perform as well as leading scientists reviewing only for high-impact journals. By giving citeable academic recognition for reviewing, R-index will encourage more participation with better reviews, regardless of the career stage. Moreover, the R-index will allow editors to exploit scores to manage and improve their review team, and for journals to promote high average scores as signals of a practical and efficient service to authors. Peer-review is a pervasive necessity across disciplines and the simple utility of this missing metric will credit a valuable aspect of academic productivity without having to revolutionize the current peer-review system.
topic peer-review
publication practices
science policy
index
science metrics
research assessment
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.140540
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