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Archives: Peer Review

Blogging Dangerfield — When Will This Medium Get Some Respect?

Blogging still gets no respect. Is that because we’re more hidebound about our communication advances than the 16th century was?

  • By Kent Anderson
  • Mar 30, 2011
  • 19 Comments
  • Time To Read: 4 mins

How the Internet Changed Medical Journals

Publishing supplemental files online now common, but commenting remains rare, a new study reports.

  • By Phil Davis
  • Mar 28, 2011
  • 15 Comments
  • Time To Read: 3 mins

Should Universities Pay for Peer Review?

Rather than relying on journal prestige and bibliometric indicators, universities should consider paying experts to conduct institutional peer review, report recommends.

  • By Phil Davis
  • Mar 16, 2011
  • 9 Comments
  • Time To Read: 3 mins

Journal of Cosmology and Alien Life — Reputation Precedes Refutation, But Are Brands Enough?

Alien life? Or just the will to publish, and some accomplices? While those in the field know the pecking order, those outside still get fooled.

  • By Kent Anderson
  • Mar 9, 2011
  • 12 Comments
  • Time To Read: 3 mins

The New Economics of the University Press — A Report from the AAUP

A report by the AAUP outlines the business models available to university presses and makes a case for ongoing subsidies by parent institutions.

  • By Joseph Esposito
  • Mar 7, 2011
  • 14 Comments
  • Time To Read: 5 mins

The Upcoming Must-See Documentary — Bad Writing

How can you make a movie about why some writing is good, some bad? This trailer makes it seem not only possible, but interesting.

  • By Kent Anderson
  • Mar 4, 2011
  • 4 Comments
  • Time To Read: < 1 min

When the Price of Rejection Becomes Cheaper

Does cascading peer-review increase inappropriate submissions?

  • By Phil Davis
  • Feb 24, 2011
  • 7 Comments
  • Time To Read: 2 mins

Permanence and Accountability — Why Publishers Need to Modernize Their Approaches

With more and more science being tested and communicated outside traditional outlets, we may face a moment when faith in the existing system breaks down.

  • By Kent Anderson
  • Feb 21, 2011
  • 4 Comments
  • Time To Read: 3 mins

Editors for Hire — Providing Assistance or Exploiting Hopes?

Should publishers endorse commercial editing services?

  • By Phil Davis
  • Feb 15, 2011
  • 27 Comments
  • Time To Read: 3 mins

Crowdsourcing, Reference Works, and Peer-Review: Some Surprising Connections

A new study suggests that reference works can be created cheaply and effectively through only mildly organized collaborations. Have we been missing a critical contribution of peer-review? Does it suggest that post-publication won’t review won’t be very effective?

  • By Kent Anderson
  • Feb 9, 2011
  • 2 Comments
  • Time To Read: 4 mins

Will Reference Books and Journals Survive? A Debate

A debate at PSP reveals much, especially after it ends.

  • By Kent Anderson
  • Feb 3, 2011
  • 14 Comments
  • Time To Read: 3 mins

The Journal of Universal Rejection, and Suggestions for Improving It

While the JofUR may represent a culmination of many trends in publishing, there’s still room for improvement.

  • By Kent Anderson
  • Jan 28, 2011
  • 9 Comments
  • Time To Read: 2 mins

Don't Look Back — Do Scientists Squelch Citations to Justify Claims of Novelty?

A study showing that randomized controlled trials don’t cite much of the preceding literature suggests there’s a problem, but it’s unclear exactly what the problem is.

  • By Kent Anderson
  • Jan 20, 2011
  • 24 Comments
  • Time To Read: 3 mins

When Fraud Hits Medical Science: The Decade of the Vaccine-Autism Scandal

Now that the vaccine-autism link has been shown to be based on a fraud, will ego continue to trump humility in the face of evidence?

  • By Kent Anderson
  • Jan 17, 2011
  • 10 Comments
  • Time To Read: 5 mins

Ben Goldacre: A Gift to Skepticism

An interesting and entertaining debunking of some obvious fluffs in medical science, with a chilling reminder of how libel laws in some countries can kill scientific discourse.

  • By Kent Anderson
  • Jan 14, 2011
  • 1 Comment
  • Time To Read: < 1 min

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The mission of the Society for Scholarly Publishing (SSP) is to advance scholarly publishing and communication, and the professional development of its members through education, collaboration, and networking. SSP established The Scholarly Kitchen blog in February 2008 to keep SSP members and interested parties aware of new developments in publishing.

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