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eMJA Internet Peer Review Studies

Study I

 —

Study II

 —

Theory




eMJA Internet Peer Review Study I

From March 1996 to June 1997, the eMJA, in cooperation with the University of Sydney Library, conducted a trial of open peer review using the Internet. In fact, the website of The Medical Journal of Australia was first developed as part of that experiment.

In the study, articles that had been accepted for publication after conventional peer review were published on the web before they were edited for print. The reviews were published with the article, and readers were invited to comment on the article and reviews before the text was finalised. Results of the first study suggested that open review on the Internet has some benefits.

The results of the first eMJA Internet peer review study were presented at The International Congress on Biomedical Peer Review and Global Communications, 17-21 September 1997, Prague, Czech Republic.

A full report was published in The Lancet:

Bingham CM, Higgins G, Coleman R, Van Der Weyden MB. The Medical Journal of Australia internet peer-review study. Lancet 1998; 352: 441-445.

blutri.gif - 92 Bytes  Click here for a short description of the study.

blutri.gif - 92 Bytes  Click here for the original study proposal (May 1995).

The last six articles to enter the first internet peer review study can still be viewed as they were presented then:

eMJA Internet Peer Review Study II

In September 1998 we launched a second, more ambitious, study. In this study, articles submitted for publication were circulated to reviewers via the world wide web (using password-protected access) and the review process was conducted as an online discussion between the journal editors, reviewers, authors and a small panel of consultants who represented a wider range of expertise and journal readership.

When an article was accepted for publication, both the article and the record of its review process were rapidly published on the world wide web for open review by the Journal's readers. After four weeks of open review, the article was finalised and published in print.

blutri.gif - 92 Bytes  Click here for the editorial that launched the second study.

blutri.gif - 92 Bytes  Click here for the protocol of the second study

However, Internet Peer Review Study II never advanced beyond the pilot stage. After piloting our open-interactive peer review system with ten articles, the study collapsed. This was not because authors or reviewers objected. Nine out of the ten (self-selected) authors said that they preferred the new system to the old, and so did 23 of the 26 reviewers. But there were two problems within the journal itself. One was technical: we lacked efficient tools for managing the electronic peer review process, in the context of a journal that was still paper-based, and this meant that the study was, for us, premature. The other was the reluctance of the editors of the journal, who objected to the new process for various reasons (among them uncertainty about how to moderate the review debate, a feeling that the process entailed extra work, and unwillingness to work with electronic rather than paper documents).

Both the technical and the human limitations on internet-readiness have largely disappeared from the MJA in the last couple of years, and we may venture again into new peer review methods. The increasing popularity of email and the continuing rise in computer skills within the medical profession mean that electronic manuscript submission and peer review are now favoured alternatives to paper-based systems.

Seven of the ten articles that entered IPRS II were published by the MJA and they are presented here as they appeared in the study:

Theory of open peer review

The eMJA studies in internet peer review arose from a theoretical position that peer review processes would benefit from greater openness and procedural transparency. The rationale is explained more fully in the following publications:



The Medical Journal of Australia

Craig Bingham, Communications Development Manager, MJA



Page created: 1996. Last revision: 21 December 2005.


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