The Role of Peer Review in the Scientific Process (AQA AS Psychology)
Revision Note
Written by: Claire Neeson
Reviewed by: Lucy Vinson
Peer review
Peer review plays a key part in the verification of research
It helps to determine if the research can be deemed scientifically acceptable
Peer review is an independent assessment carried out before the research is published by other experts in the field
It is completed independently and usually anonymously
The aims of peer reviews are to:
assess the appropriateness of the research to the research topic/aim
check the validity of the findings
judge the significance of the research
check that the research is original and has not been plagiarised
suggest or provide recommendations/amendments
Usually, more than one expert conducts the peer review
The experts review the research and suggest edits or identify issues with the research
There are then usually four outcomes which can be reached
Accept the work unconditionally
Accept the work as long as the researcher makes specific improvements/amendments
Reject the work, but suggest amendments for re-submission of the work
Reject the work outright
There are three types of peer review
Open Review
The researchers and reviewers are known to each other
This type of review is believed to reduce plagiarism
Single-blind Review
This is the most common form of peer review
The researcher's name is not revealed to the reviewers
Double-blind Review
The researcher and the reviewers are anonymous to each other
Examiner Tips and Tricks
Make sure that you understand and can communicate clearly the difference between the process of the peer review and the role of the peer review in the research process. The process of the review involves the ways in which the research is assessed; the role of the review is to ensure credible research is published.
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