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[Peer Review] Revisão Externa de Qualidade (Revisão pelos Pares)
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16012010
[Peer Review] Revisão Externa de Qualidade (Revisão pelos Pares)
O poder do apoio de pares na academia
Weizmann Young PI Forum: The Power of Peer Support
Ron Milo1,and Maya Schuldiner2, .
1 Department of Plant Sciences, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 76100, Israel
2 Department of Molecular Genetics, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 76100, Israel
Summary
The academic path is a challenging journey full of hurdles and without a clear roadmap. As young faculty, we searched for support in steering through the complexities of our new roles. Here we describe our experience in forming a peer support group and share the lessons learnt along the way.
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Uma nova publicação científica sobre como funciona a biologia: Hypotheses in the Life Sciences (Open Access)
Aims and scope
Hypotheses in the Life Sciences is an open access journal fostering exchange of genuinely new and challenging hypotheses about how biology works. We publish original papers presenting new insights that explain biological processes or mechanisms which are relevant to a wide range of life science researchers. While most of the biological literature focuses on the accumulation of data or its statistical analysis, Hypotheses in the Life Sciences publishes the rigorous product of human creativity and analysis in topics such as
· mechanisms of cellular control and interaction
· chemical processes in biological systems
· evolutionary explanations for current biological systems
· the origin of life
· function and control of physiological mechanisms such as haemostasis, immunity and cognition
· mechanisms in developmental biology of plants and animals
· environmental effects on biological systems
- providing that they have testable implications
Hypotheses in the Life Sciences is not a forum for new experimental data, although preliminary results, perhaps ones which provided the stimulus for your hypothesis or the first evidence for it, are acceptable. We do not usually publish descriptions of new medical therapeutic or diagnostic ideas, and we only publish reviews or editorial material by invitation.
Papers are selected solely on scientific merit, as judged by the editor and Editorial Board and irrespective of who writes them or where they work. Hypotheses in the Life Sciences is not a political forum and its objectives are purely scientific. We will not publish papers with a strong political slant or agenda, nor consider political criteria when selecting papers. Hypotheses in the Life Sciences will reject automatically any material that is considered illegal, libellous, obscene or a breach of copyright of other parties.
A hypothesis should be organized, account for known facts better than existing explanations, and have real world consequences. So we expect papers to
· provide new insight into biology that is of wide interest to life science researchers
· be clear, logical and easy to follow
· be compatible with known fact (although it may contest the interpretation of those facts, or dispute that they are facts at all)
provide some testable implications that distinguish it from other theories, hypotheses or explanations.
Hypotheses in the Life Sciences particularly welcomes hypotheses which are testable using simple, low-cost or readily available resources.
Because traditional anonymous peer review often discriminates against novelty, and can allow reviewers the power to block the publications of valid views different from their own without concomitant responsibility for doing so, Hypotheses in the Life Sciences does not routinely subject papers to peer review, although some will be reviewed anonymously at the editor’s discretion. To ensure scientific quality, all papers submitted to Hypotheses in the Life Sciences are subject to editorial panel review. The journal emphasises explicitly that authors, not reviewers, bear responsibility for papers’ contents and conclusions. Hypotheses in the Life Sciences also publishes a moderated web-based commentary system for follow-up comments on papers.
To allow us to publish on open access, we have to charge authors page charges on published articles. There is no charge to submit your hypothesis to the Journal. You will retain all copyright on your article: Hypotheses in the Life Sciences just requires your permission to publish it.
Source/Fonte: Hypothesis in the Life Sciences
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NOTA CAUSTICANTE E ESPERANÇOSA DESTE BLOGGER:
Este novo journal surgiu por que o sistema de revisão por pares (peer-review é trè chic, chérie, trè chic) often discriminates against novelty, and can allow reviewers the power to block the publications of valid views different from their own without concomitant responsibility for doing so [frequentemente discrimina contra a novidade, e pode permitir aos revisores o poder de bloquear as publicações de opiniões válidas diferentes das suas sem a concomitante responsabilidade por fazê-lo]
Espera-se que este journal traga ares de liberdade de pensamento teórico na Akademia.
Frank Tipler desce o cacete na Nomenklatura científica: a diferença entre a ' verdadeira ciência' e a ciência 'Cargo cult'
Sábado, Julho 31, 2010
The Difference between ‘True Science’ and ‘Cargo-Cult Science’
“Science is the belief in the ignorance of experts” is how the great Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman defined science.
July 27, 2010 - by Frank J. Tipler
“Science is the belief in the ignorance of experts” is how the great Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman defined science in his article “What is Science?” Feynman emphasized this definition by repeating it in a stand-alone sentence in extra large typeface in his article. (Feynman’s essay is available online, but behind a subscription wall: The Physics Teacher (1969) volume 7, starting page 313.)
Immediately after his definition of science, Feynman wrote: “When someone says, ‘Science teaches such and such,’ he is using the word incorrectly. Science doesn’t teach anything; experience teaches it. If they say to you, ‘Science has shown such and such,’ you should ask, ‘How does science show it? How did the scientists find out? How? What? Where?’ It should not be ‘science has shown.’ And you have as much right as anyone else, upon hearing about the experiments (but be patient and listen to all the evidence) to judge whether a sensible conclusion has been arrived at.”
And I say, Amen. Notice that “you” is the average person. You have the right to hear the evidence, and you have the right to judge whether the evidence supports the conclusion. We now use the phrase “scientific consensus,” or “peer review,” rather than “science has shown.” By whatever name, the idea is balderdash. Feynman was absolutely correct.
When the attorney general of Virginia sued to force Michael Mann of “hockey stick” fame to provide the raw data he used, and the complete computer program used to analyze the data, so that “you” could decide, the Faculty Senate of the University of Virginia (where Mann was a professor at the time he defended the hockey stick) declared this request — Feynman’s request — to be an outrage. You peons, the Faculty Senate decreed, must simply accept the conclusions of any “scientific endeavor that has satisfied peer review standards.” Feynman’s — and the attorney general’s and my own and other scientists’ — request for the raw data, so we can “judge whether a sensible conclusion has been arrived at,” would, according to the Faculty Senate, “send a chilling message to scientists … and indeed scholars in any discipline.”
According the Faculty Senate of the University of Virginia, “science,” and indeed “scholarship” in general, is no longer an attempt to establish truth by replicable experiment, or by looking at evidence that can be checked by anyone. “Truth” is now to be established by the decree of powerful authority, by “peer review.” Wasn’t the whole point of the Enlightenment to avoid exactly this?
...
Read more here: Pajamas Media
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NOTA CAUSTICANTE DESTE BLOGGER:
Este blogger há muito vem denunciando o comportamento dos revisores como guardas-cancelas impedindo a divulgação de novas ideias e teoria científicas, bem como evitando com unhas e dentes quaisquer críticas às teorias darling da Akademia, especialmente as que dizem respeito às origens e evolução do universe e da vida. É preciso acabar com esse patrulhamento que impede o avanço da ciência.
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Vote neste blog para o prêmio TOPBLOG 2010.
Revisão por pares ou tabuleiro de Ouija?
A Reliability-Generalization Study of Journal Peer Reviews: A Multilevel Meta-Analysis of Inter-Rater Reliability and Its Determinants
Lutz Bornmann1*, Rüdiger Mutz2, Hans-Dieter Daniel2,3
1 Max Planck Society, Munich, Germany, 2 Professorship for Social Psychology and Research on Higher Education, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland, 3 Evaluation Office, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
Abstract
This paper presents the first meta-analysis for the inter-rater reliability (IRR) of journal peer reviews. IRR is defined as the extent to which two or more independent reviews of the same scientific document agree.
Methodology/Principal Findings
Altogether, 70 reliability coefficients (Cohen's Kappa, intra-class correlation [ICC], and Pearson product-moment correlation [r]) from 48 studies were taken into account in the meta-analysis. The studies were based on a total of 19,443 manuscripts; on average, each study had a sample size of 311 manuscripts (minimum: 28, maximum: 1983). The results of the meta-analysis confirmed the findings of the narrative literature reviews published to date: The level of IRR (mean ICC/r2 = .34, mean Cohen's Kappa = .17) was low. To explain the study-to-study variation of the IRR coefficients, meta-regression analyses were calculated using seven covariates. Two covariates that emerged in the meta-regression analyses as statistically significant to gain an approximate homogeneity of the intra-class correlations indicated that, firstly, the more manuscripts that a study is based on, the smaller the reported IRR coefficients are. Secondly, if the information of the rating system for reviewers was reported in a study, then this was associated with a smaller IRR coefficient than if the information was not conveyed.
Conclusions/Significance
Studies that report a high level of IRR are to be considered less credible than those with a low level of IRR. According to our meta-analysis the IRR of peer assessments is quite limited and needs improvement (e.g., reader system).
Citation: Bornmann L, Mutz R, Daniel H-D (2010) A Reliability-Generalization Study of Journal Peer Reviews: A Multilevel Meta-Analysis of Inter-Rater Reliability and Its Determinants. PLoS ONE 5(12): e14331. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0014331
Editor: Simon Rogers, University of Glasgow, United Kingdom
Received: April 15, 2010; Accepted: November 24, 2010; Published: December 14, 2010
Copyright: © 2010 Bornmann et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Funding: The authors have no support or funding to report.
Competing interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
* E-mail: bornmann@gv.mpg.de
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[Peer Review] Revisão Externa de Qualidade (Revisão pelos Pares) :: Comentários
Revisão por pares: a Bíblia Sagrada moderna
Quarta-feira, Março 10, 2010
Tuesday 23 February 2010
Frank Furedi
Turning peer review into modern-day holy scripture
The treatment of peer-reviewed science as an unquestionable form of authority is corrupting the peer-review system and damaging public debate.
Suddenly, the esoteric system of peer review has hit the headlines.
The Lancet, a leading British medical journal, has acknowledged that it made a serious error in publishing a study suggesting a link between the MMR vaccine and autism and bowel disease. Earlier this month, a group of leading stem cell researchers wrote an open letter pointing out the systematic abuse of peer review by a small cabal of scientists, whom they accuse of using their position to slow down the publication of the findings of their competitors.
Then there is the scandal surrounding the leaked emails of the Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia (UEA) in England, and the dubious data published by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which further exposes a worrying trend towards the corruption of peer review.
Peer review is a system that subjects scientific and scholarly work to the scrutiny of other experts in the field. Ideally it ensures that research is only approved or published when it meets the standards of scientific rigour and its findings are sound. At its best, peer review guarantees that it is disinterested science which informs public discussion and debate. When established through peer review, the authority of science helps to clarify disputes and injects into public discussion the latest findings and research. Peer reviewing depends on a community of experts who are competent and committed to impartiality. It depends on the commitment and collaboration of scientists and scholars in a given field.
However, the individuals who constitute a ‘community of experts’ also tend to be preoccupied with their own personal position and status. Often, the colleagues they are reviewing and refereeing are their competitors and sometimes even their bitter rivals. The contradiction between working as a member of an expert community and one’s own personal interests cannot always be satisfactorily resolved.
Unfortunately, even with the best will in the world, peer reviewing is rarely an entirely disinterested process. All too often the system of peer review is infused with vested interests. As many of my colleagues in academia know, peer reviewing is frequently carried out through a kind of mates’ club, between friends and acquaintances, and all too often the question of who gets published and who gets rejected is determined by who you know and where you stand in a particular academic debate.
Peer reviewing cannot remain immune to the preoccupations, agenda and interests of the individuals who carry it out. Even when they have the best intentions, academics and scientists can overlook errors and become blind to the importance of a new but maverick contribution. They are ordinary mortals who have their fair share of prejudices, and are often no less petty or self-centred than other people can sometimes be. Nevertheless, peer reviewing has traditionally, at least, been the most effective way of exercising quality control over the proposals and output of the scholarly and scientific communities.
...
Read more here/Leia mais aqui: Spiked
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NOTA TRIUNFANTE DESTE BLOGGER:
Mais uma vez alguém da Academia vindica este blogger em suas afirmações. Aqui, de vez em quando eu mostro que o sistema de revisão por pares é uma coisa boa para a ciência, mas que está se tornando um sistema de guardas-cancelas epistêmico protegendo as teorias científicas 'queridinhas', ooops consensuais, de quaisquer críticas, mesmo as críticas científicas, e impedindo que novas ideias, hipóteses e teoria científicas sejam consideradas de modo civil e científico.
Fui, nem sei por que, pensando que o sistema de revisão por pares precisa de uma devassa. Pro bono publico. Pro bono scientia!
Quarta-feira, Março 10, 2010
Tuesday 23 February 2010
Frank Furedi
Turning peer review into modern-day holy scripture
The treatment of peer-reviewed science as an unquestionable form of authority is corrupting the peer-review system and damaging public debate.
Suddenly, the esoteric system of peer review has hit the headlines.
The Lancet, a leading British medical journal, has acknowledged that it made a serious error in publishing a study suggesting a link between the MMR vaccine and autism and bowel disease. Earlier this month, a group of leading stem cell researchers wrote an open letter pointing out the systematic abuse of peer review by a small cabal of scientists, whom they accuse of using their position to slow down the publication of the findings of their competitors.
Then there is the scandal surrounding the leaked emails of the Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia (UEA) in England, and the dubious data published by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which further exposes a worrying trend towards the corruption of peer review.
Peer review is a system that subjects scientific and scholarly work to the scrutiny of other experts in the field. Ideally it ensures that research is only approved or published when it meets the standards of scientific rigour and its findings are sound. At its best, peer review guarantees that it is disinterested science which informs public discussion and debate. When established through peer review, the authority of science helps to clarify disputes and injects into public discussion the latest findings and research. Peer reviewing depends on a community of experts who are competent and committed to impartiality. It depends on the commitment and collaboration of scientists and scholars in a given field.
However, the individuals who constitute a ‘community of experts’ also tend to be preoccupied with their own personal position and status. Often, the colleagues they are reviewing and refereeing are their competitors and sometimes even their bitter rivals. The contradiction between working as a member of an expert community and one’s own personal interests cannot always be satisfactorily resolved.
Unfortunately, even with the best will in the world, peer reviewing is rarely an entirely disinterested process. All too often the system of peer review is infused with vested interests. As many of my colleagues in academia know, peer reviewing is frequently carried out through a kind of mates’ club, between friends and acquaintances, and all too often the question of who gets published and who gets rejected is determined by who you know and where you stand in a particular academic debate.
Peer reviewing cannot remain immune to the preoccupations, agenda and interests of the individuals who carry it out. Even when they have the best intentions, academics and scientists can overlook errors and become blind to the importance of a new but maverick contribution. They are ordinary mortals who have their fair share of prejudices, and are often no less petty or self-centred than other people can sometimes be. Nevertheless, peer reviewing has traditionally, at least, been the most effective way of exercising quality control over the proposals and output of the scholarly and scientific communities.
...
Read more here/Leia mais aqui: Spiked
+++++
NOTA TRIUNFANTE DESTE BLOGGER:
Mais uma vez alguém da Academia vindica este blogger em suas afirmações. Aqui, de vez em quando eu mostro que o sistema de revisão por pares é uma coisa boa para a ciência, mas que está se tornando um sistema de guardas-cancelas epistêmico protegendo as teorias científicas 'queridinhas', ooops consensuais, de quaisquer críticas, mesmo as críticas científicas, e impedindo que novas ideias, hipóteses e teoria científicas sejam consideradas de modo civil e científico.
Fui, nem sei por que, pensando que o sistema de revisão por pares precisa de uma devassa. Pro bono publico. Pro bono scientia!
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