Table of Contents

Peer review

see Peer-reviewed journal

In the peer review process, a manuscript or proposal is typically reviewed by two or more experts in the relevant field, who evaluate the work based on various criteria such as the quality of the research methods, the accuracy of the data, the relevance of the results, and the overall contribution to the field. Reviewers may provide feedback on ways to improve the work or address any issues, and they may ultimately recommend that the work be accepted for publication, revised and resubmitted, or rejected.

Both the reviewer and author identities are concealed from the reviewers, and vice versa, throughout the review process. To facilitate this, authors need to ensure that their manuscripts are prepared in a way that does not give away their identity.


πŸ” Peer Review Models in Academic Publishing

πŸ“˜ 1. Single-Blind Review

βœ… Advantages:

⚠ Disadvantages:


πŸ“— 2. Double-Blind Review

βœ… Advantages:

⚠ Disadvantages:


πŸ“™ 3. Open Peer Review

βœ… Advantages:

⚠ Disadvantages:


πŸ“’ 4. Post-Publication Peer Review (PPPR)

βœ… Advantages:

⚠ Disadvantages:


πŸ““ 5. Collaborative or Interactive Review

βœ… Advantages:

⚠ Disadvantages:


🧾 Summary Table

Model Author Anonymous? Reviewer Anonymous? Public Comments?
Single-Blind ❌ βœ… ❌
Double-Blind βœ… βœ… ❌
Open Review ❌ ❌ βœ… (sometimes)
PPPR ❌ βœ… / ❌ βœ…
Collaborative Partial Partial ❌ / βœ…

πŸ’‘ Tip for Authors: Always check the journal's peer review policy before submissionβ€”transparency, review speed, and the potential for bias vary significantly across models.

Process

Peer Review Process.

Double-blind peer review process

Double-blind peer review process

Crisis

Peer review crisis.

Challenges

see Peer review challenges.

Disadvantages

see Peer review disadvantages.

Peer reviewer

Peer reviewer