Reading Peer Review
PLOS ONE and Institutional Change in Academia
Samuel Moore author Martin Paul Eve author Cameron Neylon author Daniel Paul O'Donnell author Robert Gadie author Victoria Odeniyi author Shahina Parvin author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:4th Feb '21
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This Element examines digital peer-review practices and institutional change focusing on reviewer behaviour at the megajournal PLOS ONE.
This Element presents the background contexts and histories of peer review, the data-handling sensitivities of this type of research, the typical properties of reports in the journal to which the authors had access, a taxonomy of the reports, and their sentiment arcs. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.This Element describes for the first time the database of peer review reports at PLOS ONE, the largest scientific journal in the world, to which the authors had unique access. Specifically, this Element presents the background contexts and histories of peer review, the data-handling sensitivities of this type of research, the typical properties of reports in the journal to which the authors had access, a taxonomy of the reports, and their sentiment arcs. This unique work thereby yields a compelling and unprecedented set of insights into the evolving state of peer review in the twenty-first century, at a crucial political moment for the transformation of science. It also, though, presents a study in radicalism and the ways in which PLOS's vision for science can be said to have effected change in the ultra-conservative contemporary university. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
ISBN: 9781108742702
Dimensions: 125mm x 180mm x 5mm
Weight: 130g
75 pages