Peer review + Psychology and the economy

    Cards (5)

    • Peer review - Before being an official part of a journal research must be subjected to scrutiny by a small group of peers who are unknown to the researchers
    • Aims of peer review
      1. Allocate research funding
      2. Validate quality and relevance of research - Formulation of hypotheses, methodology, statistical tests and conclusions drawn
      3. Suggest amendments or improvements
    • Evaluation of peer review - Anonymity
      • Remain anonymous - More honest review
      • Minority us A as a way of criticising other rival researchers - In direct competition for limited research funding - Some favour viewing as public
    • Evaluation of peer review - Publication bias
      • Publish headline grabbing findings - Increase credibility and circulation
      • Preference to publish positive results
      • Research that don't meet criteria is ignored or disregarded
    • Evaluation of peer review - Burying ground-breaking research
      • Supress opposition to mainstream theories
      • Researchers critical of research contradicting own view
      • Established scientist are chosen as reviewers - More likely to pass new and innovative research
      • May slow down rate of change withing scientific discipline