Fang Ferric C, Bowen Anthony, Casadevall Arturo
Departments of Laboratory Medicine and Microbiology, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, United States.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, United States.
Elife. 2016 Feb 16;5:e13323. doi: 10.7554/eLife.13323.
Peer review is widely used to assess grant applications so that the highest ranked applications can be funded. A number of studies have questioned the ability of peer review panels to predict the productivity of applications, but a recent analysis of grants funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in the US found that the percentile scores awarded by peer review panels correlated with productivity as measured by citations of grant-supported publications. Here, based on a re-analysis of these data for the 102,740 funded grants with percentile scores of 20 or better, we report that these percentile scores are a poor discriminator of productivity. This underscores the limitations of peer review as a means of assessing grant applications in an era when typical success rates are often as low as about 10%.
同行评审被广泛用于评估科研基金申请,以便为排名最高的申请提供资金。一些研究对同行评审小组预测申请项目产出能力提出了质疑,但最近一项对美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)资助的科研基金的分析发现,同行评审小组给出的百分制分数与受资助出版物的引用次数所衡量的产出相关。在此,基于对这些百分制分数为20或更高的102740项资助项目数据的重新分析,我们报告称这些百分制分数并不能很好地区分产出。这凸显了在典型成功率通常低至约10%的时代,同行评审作为评估科研基金申请手段的局限性。