Do conspicuous manuscripts experience shorter time in the duration of peer review?

12/17/2021
by   Guangyao Zhang, et al.
0

A question often asked by authors is how long would it take for the peer review process. Peer review duration has been concerned much by authors and attracted much attention in academia these years. Existing research on this field focuses primarily on a single quantitative dimension. Seldom studies considered that peer review duration is closely related to the attractiveness of manuscripts. This study aims to fill this research gap employing attention economy theory. By analyzing the peer review history from the British Medical Journal (BMJ), we find that a significant negative relationship exists between the peer review duration and altmetric attention score (AAs). Overall, our study contributes to understanding peer review behavior from a new perspective and bridging the divide between peer reviews and altmetrics.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
08/08/2023

Safeguarding Scientific Integrity: Examining Conflicts of Interest in the Peer Review Process

This case study analyzes the expertise, potential conflicts of interest,...
research
10/12/2019

Efficiency in managing peer-review of scientific manuscripts – editors' perspective

The purpose of this paper is to introduce a model for measuring the effi...
research
12/02/2017

Artificial intelligence in peer review: How can evolutionary computation support journal editors?

With the volume of manuscripts submitted for publication growing every y...
research
05/01/2020

Performance of Generalized Hypercubes in Dynamic Peer-to-Peer Networks

Highly dynamic peer-to-peer networks are becoming very significant due t...
research
06/17/2021

Network Science, Homophily and Who Reviews Who in the Linux Kernel?

In this research, we investigate peer review in the development of Linux...
research
07/20/2022

Journal Impact Factor and Peer Review Thoroughness and Helpfulness: A Supervised Machine Learning Study

The journal impact factor (JIF) is often equated with journal quality an...
research
03/16/2021

Technical Debt in the Peer-Review Documentation of R Packages: a rOpenSci Case Study

Context: Technical Debt is a metaphor used to describe code that is "not...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset