3.8 Article

A New Method and Metric to Evaluate the Peer Review Process of Scholarly Journals

Journal

PUBLISHING RESEARCH QUARTERLY
Volume 30, Issue 1, Pages 23-38

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12109-013-9339-y

Keywords

H-index; Methods; Metric systems; Ethics; Peer review; Open access; pre-SCORE; Publishing

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This paper will propose a new system that produces a metric that is an indicator of the level of peer review conducted prior to the publication of scholarly material. A mathematical algorithm which incorporates weighted values of the roles within the peer review process is created. The h-index, which is a value that measures the productivity and impact of a scientist or scholar, is also incorporated. Each round of review is weighted using the square root as later rounds of peer review are often less rigorous than earlier rounds. Once a paper is accepted the calculation is conducted and a peer review evaluation metric, or Peer Review Evaluation Score (pre-SCORE) is available. It is clear that such a metric would prove beneficial to all engaged parties (authors, publishers, readers, libraries). Authors will know that their work is being evaluated by a trustworthy publication and by experts in their field. Legitimate, ethical publishers will be recognized as such. Readers would have the ability to filter out material which was not properly vetted, and libraries/consortia would have further assurance that their limited funds are spent wisely. Future studies to see if there is a correlation between the pre-SCORE and Impact Factor or highly cited material is possible. The proposed metric would be one more tool available to aid in the discovery of quality published research.

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