Department of Clinical Neurological Sciences, London Health Sciences Centre, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada; Stroke Outcomes Research Canada (www.sorcan.ca).
Ann Neurol. 2014 Aug;76(2):151-8. doi: 10.1002/ana.24218. Epub 2014 Jul 16.
A better understanding of the manuscript peer-review process could improve the likelihood that research of the highest quality is funded and published. To this end, we aimed to assess consistency across reviewers' recommendations, agreement between reviewers' recommendations and editors' final decisions, and reviewer- and editor-level factors influencing editorial decisions at the journal Stroke.
We analyzed all initial original contributions submitted to Stroke from January 2004 through December 2011. All submissions were linked to the final editorial decision (accept vs reject). We assessed the level of agreement between reviewers (intraclass correlation coefficient). We compared the initial editorial decision (accept, minor revision, major revision, and reject) across reviewers' recommendations. We performed a logistic regression analysis to identify reviewer- and editor-related factors associated with acceptance as the final decision.
Of 12,902 original submissions to Stroke during the 8-year study period, the level of agreement between reviewers was between fair and moderate (intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.55, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.09-0.75). Likelihood of acceptance was <5% if at least 1 reviewer recommended a rejection. In the multivariate analysis, higher reviewer-assigned priority scores were related to greater odds of acceptance (odds ratio [OR] = 26.3, 95% CI = 23.2-29.8), whereas higher number of reviewers (OR = 0.54 per additional reviewer, 95% CI = 0.50-0.59) and suggestions for reviewers by authors versus no suggestions (OR = 0.83, 95% CI = 0.73-0.94) had lesser odds of acceptance.
This analysis of the peer-review process at Stroke identified several factors that might be targeted to improve the consistency and fairness of the overall process.
更好地理解稿件同行评议过程,可以提高获得资金和发表的研究质量。为此,我们旨在评估评审员建议的一致性、评审员建议与编辑最终决定的一致性,以及影响《中风》杂志编辑决策的评审员和编辑因素。
我们分析了 2004 年 1 月至 2011 年 12 月期间提交给《中风》的所有初始原始论文。所有提交的论文都与最终编辑决定(接受或拒绝)相关联。我们评估了评审员之间的一致性水平(组内相关系数)。我们比较了评审员建议的初始编辑决定(接受、小修、大修和拒绝)。我们进行了逻辑回归分析,以确定与接受为最终决定相关的评审员和编辑相关因素。
在 8 年的研究期间,有 12902 篇原始论文提交给《中风》,评审员之间的一致性处于一般到中等水平(组内相关系数=0.55,95%置信区间[CI]:0.09-0.75)。如果至少有 1 位评审员建议拒绝,则接受的可能性<5%。在多变量分析中,较高的评审员分配优先级得分与较高的接受可能性相关(比值比[OR]:26.3,95%CI:23.2-29.8),而较高的评审员人数(OR:每增加一位评审员则降低 0.54,95%CI:0.50-0.59)和作者对评审员的建议与没有建议相比(OR:0.83,95%CI:0.73-0.94)接受的可能性较小。
对《中风》同行评议过程的分析确定了一些可能被用于提高整体过程一致性和公平性的因素。