COMMENTS

  1. What Is Peer Review?

    What Is Peer Review? | Types & Examples

  2. Peer Review in Scientific Publications: Benefits, Critiques, & A

    Peer Review in Scientific Publications: Benefits, Critiques, ...

  3. A Definition of Peer-Reviewed

    What are Peer-Reviewed Journals? - Forrer Learning Commons

  4. Understanding Peer Review in Science

    The manuscript peer review process helps ensure scientific publications are credible and minimizes errors. Peer review is an essential element of the scientific publishing process that helps ensure that research articles are evaluated, critiqued, and improved before release into the academic community. Take a look at the significance of peer review in scientific publications, the typical steps ...

  5. What Is Peer Review?

    The most common types are: Single-blind review. Double-blind review. Triple-blind review. Collaborative review. Open review. Relatedly, peer assessment is a process where your peers provide you with feedback on something you've written, based on a set of criteria or benchmarks from an instructor.

  6. Peer review

    Peer review - American Psychological Association (APA) ... Peer Review

  7. What is Peer Review?

    Finding (and Identifying) Peer-Reviewed Articles - LibGuides

  8. Everything You Need to Know About Peer Review

    This article offers succinct guidance about peer review: not only "what to do" (the Good) but also "what not to do" (the Bad) and "what to never do" (the Ugly). It outlines models of peer review and provides an overview of types of reviewer bias, including conflict of interest. More recent developments in journal peer review, such ...

  9. What is Peer Review?

    What is Peer Review?

  10. What is Peer Review?

    The peer-review process tries to ensure that the highest quality research gets published. When an article is submitted to a peer-reviewed journal, the editor after deciding if the article meets the basic requirements for inclusion, sends it to be reviewed by other scholars (the author's peers) within the same field.

  11. Peer review guidance: a primer for researchers

    Peer review guidance: a primer for researchers - PMC

  12. Research Guides: Peer Reviewed Literature: What is Peer Review?

    The terms scholarly, academic, peer-reviewed and refereed are sometimes used interchangeably, although there are slight differences.. Scholarly and academic may refer to peer-reviewed articles, but not all scholarly and academic journals are peer-reviewed (although most are.) For example, the Harvard Business Review is an academic journal but it is editorially reviewed, not peer-reviewed.

  13. Explore Information

    Peer reviewed articles have undergone review (hence the "peer-review") by fellow experts in that field, as well as an editorial review process. The purpose of this is to ensure that, as much as possible, the finished product meets the standards of the field. Peer reviewed publications are one of the main ways researchers communicate with each ...

  14. Peer review Definition & Meaning

    The meaning of PEER REVIEW is a process by which something proposed (as for research or publication) is evaluated by a group of experts in the appropriate field.

  15. An introduction to peer review

    A great many processes go by the name of peer review, with no real operational definition. It is, however, generally understood to be the review of a scientific manuscript by scientists not involved in the study. These are selected by the editing staff of the journal based on the scientists' knowledge of the domain, research methodology and ...

  16. Understanding Peer Reviewed Articles

    Peer review is a process for evaluating research studies before they are published by an academic journal. These studies typically communicate original research or analysis for other researchers. The Peer Review Process at a Glance: Looking for peer-reviewed articles?

  17. Types of Peer Review

    Peer review is "a process where scientists ("peers") evaluate the quality of other scientists' work. By doing this, they aim to ensure the work is rigorous, coherent, uses past research and adds to what we already know." This quote comes from an explainer on The Conversation, which you can read here. Peer review brings academic research to publication in the following ways:

  18. Peer review

    Explore how scientific research by psychologists can inform our professional lives, family and community relationships, emotional wellness, and more. ... NIH resources about the regulations and processes that govern peer review, including management of conflicts of interest, applicant and reviewer responsibilities in maintaining the integrity ...

  19. What does it mean when a publication is peer reviewed?

    What does it mean when a publication is peer reviewed?

  20. Guides: Peer-Review and Primary Research: What is a Primary Study

    Peer-Review and Primary Research

  21. The peer review process

    The peer review process - PMC

  22. Peer review

    Peer review has a key role in ensuring that information published in scientific journals is as truthful, valid and accurate as possible. ... Peer review cannot improve poor research, but it can often "correct, enhance and strengthen the statistical analysis of data and can markedly improve presentation and clarity" [4].

  23. Defining mental health literacy: a systematic literature review and

    This paper aims to explore how the term "mental health literacy" (MHL) is defined and understand the implications for public mental health and educational interventions.,An extensive search was conducted by searching PubMed, ERIC, PsycINFO, Scopus and Web of Science. Keywords such as "mental health literacy" and "definition" were used.

  24. Peer review and the publication process

    Peer review is one of various mechanisms used to ensure the quality of publications in academic journals. It helps authors, journal editors and the reviewer themselves. It is a process that is unlikely to be eliminated from the publication process. All forms of peer review have their own strengths and weaknesses.