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. 2017 Oct 3;113(1):503–532. doi: 10.1007/s11192-017-2522-8

The emergence of a field: a network analysis of research on peer review

Vladimir Batagelj 1,2,, Anuška Ferligoj 3, Flaminio Squazzoni 4
PMCID: PMC5629241  PMID: 29056788

Abstract

This article provides a quantitative analysis of peer review as an emerging field of research by revealing patterns and connections between authors, fields and journals from 1950 to 2016. By collecting all available sources from Web of Science, we built a dataset that included approximately 23,000 indexed records and reconstructed collaboration and citation networks over time. This allowed us to trace the emergence and evolution of this field of research by identifying relevant authors, publications and journals and revealing important development stages. Results showed that while the term “peer review” itself was relatively unknown before 1970 (“referee” was more frequently used), publications on peer review significantly grew especially after 1990. We found that the field was marked by three development stages: (1) before 1982, in which most influential studies were made by social scientists; (2) from 1983 to 2002, in which research was dominated by biomedical journals, and (3) from 2003 to 2016, in which specialised journals on science studies, such as Scientometrics, gained momentum frequently publishing research on peer review and so becoming the most influential outlets. The evolution of citation networks revealed a body of 47 publications that form the main path of the field, i.e., cited sources in all the most influential publications. They could be viewed as the main corpus of knowledge for any newcomer in the field.

Keywords: Peer review, Journals, Authors, Citation networks, Main path

Introduction

Peer review is key to ensure rigour and quality of scholarly publications, establish standards that differentiate scientific discoveries from other forms of knowledge and maintain credibility of research inside and outside the scientific community (Bornmann 2011). Although many believe it has roots that trace back centuries ago, historical analysis indicated that the very idea and practices of peer review that are predominant today in scholarly journals are recent. Indeed, peer review developed in the post-World War II decades when the tremendous expansion of science took place and the “publish or perish” culture and their competitive symbolisms we all know definitively gained momentum (Fyfe et al. 2017). Unfortunately, although this mechanism determines resource allocation, scientist reputation and academic careers (Squazzoni et al. 2013), a large-scale quantitative analysis of the emergence of peer review as a field of research that could reveal patterns, connections and identify milestones and developments is missing (Squazzoni and Takács 2011).

This paper aims to fill this gap by providing a quantitative analysis of peer review as an emerging field of research that reveals patterns and connections between authors, fields and journals from 1950 to 2016. We collected all available sources from Web of Science (WoS) by searching for all records including “peer review” among their keywords. By using the program WoS2Pajek (Batagelj 2007), we transformed these data in a collection of networks to reconstruct citation networks and different two-mode networks, including works by authors, works by keywords and works by journals. This permitted us to trace the most important stages in the evolution of the field. Furthermore, by performing a ’main path’ analysis, we tried to identify the most relevant body of knowledge that this field developed over time.

Our effort has a twofold purpose. First, it aims to reconstruct the field by quantitatively tracking the formation and evolution of the community of experts who studied peer review. Secondly, it aims to reveal the most important contributions and their connections in terms of citations and knowledge flow, so as to provide important resources for all newcomers in the field. By recognizing the characteristics and boundaries of the field, we aim to inspire further research on this important institution, which is always under the spotlight and under attempts of reforms, often without relying on robust evidence (Edwards and Roy 2016; Squazzoni et al. 2017).

For standard theoretical notions on networks we use the terminology and definitions from Batagelj et al. (2014). All network analyses were performed using Pajek—a program for analysis and visualization of large networks (De Nooy et al. 2011).

Data

Data collection

We searched for any record containing “peer review*” in WoS, Clarivate analytics’s multidisciplinary databases of bibliographic information in May and June 2015. We obtained 17,053 hits and additional 2867 hits by searching for "refereeing". Figure 1 reports an example of records we extracted. We limited the search to the WoS core collection because for other WoS databases the CR-fields (containing citation information) could not be exported.

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1

Record from web of science

Using WoS2Pajek (Batagelj 2007), we transformed data in a collection of networks: the citation network Cite (from the field CR), the authorship network WA (from the field AU), the journalship network WJ (from the field CR or J9), and the keywordship network WK (from the field ID or DE or TI). An important property of all these networks is that they share the same set—the set of works (papers, reports, books, etc.) as the first node set W. It is important to note that a citation network Cite is based on the citing relation Ci

wCizworkwcitesworkz

Works that appear in descriptions were of two types:

  • Hits—works with a WoS description;

  • Only cited works (listed in CR fields, but not contained in the hits).

These data were stored in a partition DC: DC[w]=1 iff a work w had a WoS description; and DC[w]=0 otherwise. Another partition year contained the work’s publication year from the field PY or CR. We also obtained a vector NP: NP[w]= number of pages of each work w. We built a CSV file titles with basic data about works with DC=1 to be used to list results. Details about the structure of names in constructed networks are provided in “The structure of names in constructed networks” section.

The dataset was updated in March 2016 by adding hits for the years 2015 and 2016. We manually prepared short descriptions of the most cited works (fields: AU, PU, TI, PY, PG, KW; but without CR data) and assigned them the value DC=2.

A first preliminary analysis performed in 2015 revealed that many works without a WoS description had large indegrees in the citation network. We manually searched for each of them (with indegree larger or equal to 20) and, when possible, we added them into the data set. It is important to note that earlier papers, which had a significant influence in the literature, did not often use the now established terminology (e.g., keywords) and were therefore overlooked by our queries.

After some iterations, we finally constructed the data set used in this paper. The final run of the program WoS2Pajek produced networks with sets of the following sizes: works |W|=721,547, authors |A|=295,849, journals |J|=39,988, and keywords |K|=36,279. In both phases, 22,981 records were collected. There were 887 duplicates (considered only once).

We removed multiple links and loops (resulting from homonyms) from the networks. The cleaned citation network CiteAll had n=721,547 nodes and m=869,821 arcs.

Figure 2 shows a schematic structure of a citation network. The circular nodes correspond to the query hits. The works cited in hits are presented with the triangular nodes. Some of them are in the following phase (search for often cited works) converted into the squares (found in WoS by our secondary search). They introduce new cited nodes represented as diamonds. It is important to note that the age of a work was determined by its publication year. In a citation network, in order to get a cycle, an “older” node had to cite a “younger or the same age” work. Given that this rarely happens, citation networks are usually (almost) acyclic.

Fig. 2.

Fig. 2

Citation network structure: DC=0—circle, square; DC=1—triangle, diamond

To acyclic network’s nodes, we can assign levels such that for each arc, the level of its initial node is higher than the level of its terminal node. In an acyclic citation network, an example of a level is the publication date of a work. Therefore, acyclic networks can be visualized by levels—vertical axis representing the level with all arcs pointing in the same direction—in Fig. 2 pointing down.

In the following section, we look at some statistical properties of obtained networks.

Distributions

In the left panel of Fig. 3, we showed a growth of the proportion q—the number of papers on peer review divided by the total number of papers from WoS (DC>0) by year. Proportions were multiplied by 1000. This means that peer review received growing interest in the literature, especially after 1990. For instance, in 1950 WoS listed only 6 works on peer review among 97,529 registered works published in that year, q1950=0.6152×10-4. In 2015, we found 2583 works on peer review among 2,641,418 registered works, q2015=0.9779×10-3.

Fig. 3.

Fig. 3

Growth of the number of works and the citation year distribution

In the right panel of Fig. 3, the distribution of all (hits + only cited) works by year is shown. It is interesting to note that this distribution can be fitted by log normal distribution (Batagelj et al. 2014, pp. 119–121):

dlnorm(x,μ,σ)=12πσxe-(lnx-μ)22σ2

Figure 4 shows indegree and outdegree distributions in the citation network CiteAll in double logarithmic scales. Interestingly, indegrees show a scale-free property. It is somehow surprising that frequencies of outdegrees in the range [3, 42] show an almost constant value—they are in the range [215, 328]. works with the largest indegrees are the most cited papers.

Fig. 4.

Fig. 4

Degree distributions in the citation network

Table 1 shows the 31 most cited works. Eight works, including the number 1, were cited for methodological reasons, not dealing with peer review. As expected, most of the top cited works were published earlier, with only eight published after 2000. We also searched for the most cited books. We found 15 books cited (number in parentheses) more than 50 times: (52) Kuhn, T: The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, 1962; (57) Glaser, BG, Strauss, AI: The Discovery of Grounded Theory, 1967; (67) Merton, RK: The Sociology of Science, 1973; (97) Lock, S: A Difficult Balance, 1985; (72) Hedges, LV, Olkin, I: Statistical methods for meta-analysis, 1985; (173) Cohen, J: Statistical power analysis, 1988; (87) Chubin, D, Hackett, EJ: Peerless Science, 1990; (60) Boyer, EL: Scholarship reconsidered, 1990; (51) Daniel, H-D: Guardians of science, 1993; (55) Miles, MB, Huberman, AM: Qualitative data analysis, 1994; (64) Gold, MR, et al.: Cost-effectiveness in health and medicine, 1996; (53) Lipsey, MW, Wilson, DB: Practical meta-analysis, 2001; (58) Weller, AC: Editorial peer review, 2001; (69) Higgins, JPT, Green, S: Systematic reviews of interventions, 2008; (130) Higgins, JPT, Green, S: Systematic reviews of interventions, 2011.

Table 1.

Most cited works

n Freq First author Year Title
1 173 Cohen, J 1988 Statistical power analysis for the behavioral sciences. Routledge
2 164 Peters, DP 1982 Peer-review practices of psychological journals—the fate of...Behav Brain Sci
3 151 Egger, M 1997 Bias in meta-analysis detected by a simple, graphical test. Brit Med J
4 150 Stroup, DF 2000 Meta-analysis of observational studies in epidemiology—a proposal for reporting. JAMA
5 135 Dersimonian, R 1986 Metaanalysis in clinical-trials. Control Clin Trials
6 130 Zuckerma, H 1971 Patterns of evaluation in science—institutionalisation, structure and functions of referee system. Minerva
7 130 Higgins, JPT 2011 Cochrane handbook for systematic reviews of interventions. Cochrane
8 126 Moher, D 2009 Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses: the PRISMA statement. Plos Med
9 125 Higgins, JPT 2003 Measuring inconsistency in meta-analyses. Brit Med J
10 121 Cicchetti, DV 1991 The reliability of peer-review for manuscript and grant submissions...Behav Brain Sci
11 119 Hirsch, JE 2005 An index to quantify an individual’s scientific research output. Proc Natl Acad Sci Usa
12 114 Mahoney, M 1977 Publication prejudices: an experimental study of confirmatory bias...cognitive therapy and research
13 114 van Rooyen, S 1999 Effect of open peer review on quality of reviews and on reviewers’ recommendations:...Brit Med J
14 114 Easterbrook, PJ 1991 Publication bias in clinical research. Lancet
15 110 Landis, JR 1977 Measurement of observer agreement for categorical data. Biometrics
16 109 Godlee, F 1998 Effect on the quality of peer review of blinding reviewers and asking them to sign their reports—...JAMA
17 108 Horrobin, DF 1990 The philosophical basis of peer-review and the suppression of innovation. JAMA
18 107 Moher, D 2009 Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses: PRISMA. Ann Intern Med
19 107 Jadad, AR 1996 Assessing the quality of reports of randomized clinical trials: Is blinding necessary? Control Clin Trials
20 105 Mcnutt, RA 1990 The effects of blinding on the quality of peer-review—a randomized trial. JAMA
21 104 Cole, S 1981 Chance and consensus in peer-review. Science
22 103 Moher, D 1999 Improving the quality of reports of meta-analyses of randomised controlled trials: QUOROM. Lancet
23 98 Justice, AC 1998 Does masking author identity improve peer review quality?—a randomized controlled trial. JAMA
24 97 Lock, S 1985 A difficult balance: editorial peer review in medicine. Nuffield Trust
25 95 van Rooyen, S 1998 Effect of blinding and unmasking on the quality of peer review—a randomized trial. JAMA
26 92 Black, N 1998 What makes a good reviewer and a good review for a general medical journal? JAMA
27 91 Scherer, RW 1994 Full publication of results initially presented in abstracts—a metaanalysis. JAMA
28 90 Higgins, JPT 2002 Quantifying heterogeneity in a meta-analysis. Stat Med
29 90 Smith, R 2006 Peer review: a flawed process at the heart of science and journals. J Roy Soc Med
30 87 Goodman, SN 1994 Manuscript quality before and after peer-review and editing at annals of internal-medicine. Ann Intern Med
31 87 Chubin, D 1990 Peerless science: peer review and US science policy. SUNY Press

We also found that works having the largest outdegree (the most citing works) were usually overview papers. These papers have been mostly published recently (in the last ten years). Among the first 50 works that cited works on peer review most frequently, only two were published before 2000—one in 1998 and another one in 1990. However, none of them were on peer review and so we did not report them here.

The boundary problem

Considering the indegree distribution in the citation network CiteAll, we found that most works were referenced only once. Therefore, we decided to remove all ‘only cited’ nodes with indegree smaller than 3 (DC=0 and indeg<3)—the boundary problem (Batagelj et al. 2014). We also removed all only cited nodes starting with strings “[ANONYM”, “WORLD_”, “INSTITUT_”, “U_S”, “*US”, “WHO_”, “*WHO”, “WHO(”. “AMERICAN_”, “DEPARTME_”, “*DEP”, “NATIONAL_”, “UNITED_”, “CENTERS_”, “INTERNAT_”, “EUROPEAN_”. The final ‘bounded’ set of works WB included 45,917 works.

Restricting two-mode networks WA, WJ and WK to the set WB and removing from their second sets nodes with indegree 0, we obtained basic networks WAB, WJB and WKB with reduced sets with the following size |AB|=62,106, |KB|=36,275, |JB|=6716.

Unfortunately, some information (e.g., co-authors, keywords) was available only for works with a WoS full description. In these cases, we limited our analysis to the set of works with a description

WD=wWB:DC[w]>0

Its size was |WD|=22,104. By restricting basic networks to the set WD, we obtained subnetworks WAD, WKD and WJD.

It is important to note that we obtain a temporal network N if the time T is attached to an ordinary network. T is a set of time points tT. In a temporal network, nodes vV and links lL are not necessarily present or active in all time points. The node activity sets T(v) and link activity sets T(l) are usually described as a sequence of time intervals. If a link l(uv) is active in a time point t then also its endnodes u and v should be active in the time point t. The time T is usually either a subset of integers, TZ, or a subset of reals, TR.

We denote a network consisting of links and nodes active in time, tT, by N(t) and call it the (network) time slice or footprint of t. Let TT (for example, a time interval). The notion of a time slice is extended to T by: a time slice N(T) for T is a network consisting of links and nodes of N active at some time point tT.

Here, we presented a simple analysis of changes of sets of main authors, main journals and main keywords through time (Tables 2345). Our analysis was based on temporal versions of subnetworks WAD, WKD and WJD—the activity times were determined by the publication year of the corresponding work.

Table 2.

Left: authors with the largest number of works (WAD indeg), Right: authors with the largest contribution to the field (weighted indegree in normalized WAD)

n Works Author Value Author
1 61 BORNMANN_L 29.1167 BORNMANN_L
2 59 ALTMAN_D 21.7833 DANIEL_H
3 55 SMITH_R 18.2453 SMITH_R
4 55 LEE_J 18.0105 ALTMAN_D
5 50 MOHER_D 17.7255 MARSHALL_E
6 48 DANIEL_H 17.0000 GARFIELD_E
7 46 SMITH_J 15.3788 SMITH_J
8 38 CURTIS_K 15.1737 RENNIE_D
9 36 BROWN_D 14.6538 SQUIRES_B
10 36 RENNIE_D 14.5636 CHENG_J
11 35 LEE_S 13.8833 THOENNES_M
12 32 WANG_J 13.7957 COHEN_J
13 32 WILLIAMS_J 13.2898 JOHNSON_C
14 31 THOENNES_M 13.2857 REYES_H
15 29 JOHNSON_C 12.9779 LEE_J
16 29 JOHNSON_J 12.6667 WELLER_A
17 29 REYES_H 11.9167 BJORK_B
18 28 ZHANG_Y 11.1648 BROWN_D
19 28 WANG_Y 10.9091 BROWN_C
20 27 ZHANG_L 10.5000 MERVIS_J
21 27 SMITH_M 10.3762 CALLAHAM_M
22 27 WILLIAMS_A 10.2952 JONES_R
23 27 CASTAGNA_C 10.2198 MOHER_D
24 25 COHEN_J 10.0000 HARNAD_S
25 25 HELSEN_W 10.0000 BEREZIN_A

Table 3.

Main authors through time

–1970 1971–1980 1981–1990 1991–2000 2001–2005 2006–2010 2011–2015
13 CLARK_G 6 WEINSTEI_P 13 SQUIRES_B 19 RENNIE_D 13 BENNINGE_M 34 BORNMANN_L 36 LEE_J
12 FISHER_H 6 MILGROM_P 8 CHALMERS_T 16 SMITH_R 13 SMITH_R 30 DANIEL_H 31 BROWN_D
9 MILSTEAD_K 6 RATENER_P 8 COHEN_L 12 REYES_H 12 ALTMAN_D 26 ALTMAN_D 25 ZHANG_L
9 SMITH_J 6 MORRISON_K 7 CHUBIN_D 11 MARSHALL_E 12 JOHNSON_J 20 HELSEN_W 25 LEE_S
8 WILEY_F 6 ZUCKERMA_H 5 GARFIELD_E 9 LUNDBERG_G 11 CASTAGNA_C 18 ANDERSON_P 24 WANG_J
8 REINDOLL_W 5 HULKA_B 5 LOCK_S 9 KOSTOFF_R 10 RUBEN_R 17 RESNICK_D 24 CURTIS_K
8 GRIFFIN_E 5 READ_W 5 HARGENS_L 9 JOHNSON_D 10 KENNEDY_D 17 MOHER_D 23 BORNMANN_L
8 ROBERTSO_A 5 GARFIELD_E 5 RENNIE_D 8 BERO_L 9 YOUNG_E 17 KAISER_M 23 MAZEROLL_S
7 ALFEND_S 4 MERTON_R 5 MARSHALL_E 8 COHEN_J 9 WEBER_P 23 WANG_Y
7 SALE_J 4 WALSH_J 5 SMITH_H 8 FLETCHER_R 9 JACKLER_R 12 CURTIS_K 19 THOENNES_M
7 MARSHALL_C 8 HAYNES_R 9 JOHNS_M 11 THOENNES_M 19 WANG_H
6 HALVORSO_H 2 CHUBIN_D 3 LUNDBERG_G 8 RUBIN_H 9 SATALOFF_R 10 LEE_J 19 MOHER_D
6 CAROL_J 2 CHALMERS_T 8 FLETCHER_S 8 D’OTTAVI_S 9 CASTAGNA_C
8 KHUDER_S 8 MOHER_D 9 SMITH_R 13 ALTMAN_D
4 GARFIELD_F 8 WEBER_R 13 SMITH_R
2 MERTON_R 7 ALTMAN_D
6 SQUIRES_B 5 DANIEL_H
5 MOHER_D 5 REYES_H
4 BORNMANN_L
4 RENNIE_D

Table 4.

Main journals (WJD indeg)

n Number Journal n Number Journal
1 515 BMJ OPEN 21 66 ANN PHARMACOTHER
2 288 JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC 22 64 NEW ENGL J MED
3 177 PLOS ONE 23 62 CUTIS
4 175 NATURE 24 59 ANN ALLERG ASTHMA IM
5 174 SCIENTOMETRICS 25 59 BEHAV BRAIN SCI
6 174 BRIT MED J 26 59 PEDIATRICS
7 165 SCIENCE 27 57 CHEM ENG NEWS
8 127 ***** 28 57 MED J AUSTRALIA
9 102 ACAD MED 29 54 J GEN INTERN MED
10 98 LANCET 30 53 MATER TODAY-PROC
11 92 SCIENTIST 31 53 J SCHOLARLY PUBL
12 91 LEARN PUBL 32 53 J NANOSCI NANOTECHNO
13 81 J AM COLL RADIOL 33 53 AM J PREV MED
14 80 PHYS TODAY 34 52 BMC PUBLIC HEALTH
15 78 ARCH PATHOL LAB MED 35 50 J SEX MED
16 78 J UROLOGY 36 50 J SPORT SCI
17 75 J ASSOC OFF AGR CHEM 37 50 MED EDUC
18 73 CAN MED ASSOC J 38 48 RES EVALUAT
19 71 ANN INTERN MED 39 48 BRIT J SPORT MED
20 67 ABSTR PAP AM CHEM S 40 47 PROCEDIA ENGINEER

Table 5.

Main journals through time

–1970 1971–1980 1981–1990 1991–2000
75 J ASSOC OFF AGR CHEM 24 SCIENCE 46 JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC 126 JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC
21 LANCET 20 MED J AUSTRALIA 42 SCIENCE 71 NATURE
15 BRIT MED J 18 NEW ENGL J MED 33 BEHAV BRAIN SCI 66 BRIT MED J
9 PHYS TODAY 16 AM J PSYCHIAT 32 PHYS TODAY 45 SCIENCE
7 SCIENCE 15 PHYS TODAY 29 NATURE 39 ANN INTERN MED
6 J ASSOC OFF ANA CHEM 11 JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC 27 NEW ENGL J MED 38 LANCET
4 J AM OIL CHEM SOC 10 HOSP COMMUNITY PSYCH 27 SCIENTIST 29 CAN MED ASSOC J
4 YALE LAW J 10 FED PROC 25 BRIT MED J 28 SCIENTIST
3 NATURE 10 BRIT MED J 19 CAN MED ASSOC J 26 BEHAV BRAIN SCI
3 BRIT J SURG 9 NATURE 16 PROF PSYCHOL 25 SCIENTOMETRICS
3 AM SOCIOL 9 AM SOCIOL 13 SCI TECHNOL HUM VAL 23 ACAD MED
7 NEW YORK STATE J MED 13 S AFR MED J 23 J ECON LIT
7 MED CARE 12 HOSPITALS
12 PHYS TODAY
9 LANCET 9 NEW ENGL J MED
6 SCIENTOMETRICS
2001–2005 2006–2010 2011–2015
49 JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC 44 SCIENTOMETRICS 489 BMJ OPEN
40 CUTIS 33 JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC 146 PLOS ONE
32 BRIT MED J 31 J SEX MED 78 SCIENTOMETRICS
28 LEARN PUBL 27 PLOS ONE 73 J AM COLL RADIOL
26 NATURE 27 J NANOSCI NANOTECHNO 53 MATER TODAY-PROC
24 ABSTR PAP AM CHEM S 27 ACAD MED 47 PROCEDIA ENGINEER
23 ACAD MED 25 SCIENTIST 47 PROCEDIA COMPUT SCI
22 J PROSTHET DENT 25 J UROLOGY 43 ARCH PATHOL LAB MED
22 ANN ALLERG ASTHMA IM 23 LEARN PUBL 41 BMC PUBLIC HEALTH
18 SCIENTOMETRICS 23 J SPORT SCI 30 BMC HEALTH SERV RES
16 J UROLOGY 23 ARCH PATHOL LAB MED 30 J ATHL TRAINING
16 MED EDUC 21 NATURE 30 AM J PREV MED
29 ACAD MED
14 LANCET 19 CUTIS
13 SCIENCE 19 MED EDUC 24 LEARN PUBL
12 SCIENTIST 19 SCIENCE 23 JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC
16 BRIT MED J 19 BMJ-BRIT MED J

Because of an increasing growth of interest (see the left panel of Fig. 3) on peer review, we decided to split the time line into intervals [1900, 1970], [1971, 1980], [1981, 1990], [1991, 2000], [2001, 2005], [2006, 2010], [2011, 2015].

Most cited works, main works, journals and keywords

The left panel of Table 2 shows the authors with the largest number of co-authored works (WAD indegree), while the right panel shows the authors with the largest fractional contribution of works (weighted indegree in the normalized WAD). If we compare authors from Table 2 with the list of the most cited works in Table 1, we see that the two rankings are very different. Only three out of 25 authors with the largest number of works published a work that is on the list of 31 the most cited works. These are J. Cohen, D. Moher with two publications, and R. Smith. This is in line with the classic study by Cole and Cole (1973) in which they analyzed several aspects of the communication process in science. They used bibliometric data and survey data of the university physicists to study the conditions making for high visibility od scientist’s work. They found four determinants of visibility: the quality of work measured by citations, the honorific awards received for their work, the prestige of their departments and specialty. In short, quantity of outputs had no effect on visibility. We did not check each listed author’s name for homonymity.

In order to calculate the author’s contribution that is shown in Table 2, we used the normalized authorship network N=[npv]. A contribution of each paper p was equal to vnpv=1. Because we did not have information about each author’s real contribution, we used the so called fractional approach (Gauffriau et al. 2007; Batagelj and Cerinšek 2013) and set

npv=wapvoutdeg(p).

This means that the contribution of an author v to the field is equal to its weighted indegree

windeg(v)=pWnpv

Table 2 shows the authors who contributed more to the field of “peer review”. Comparing both panels of Table 2, it is possible to observe, for example, that L. Bornmann contributed 0.477=29.1167/61 to the papers he co-authored as he collaborated with other researchers in the field. Vice-versa, for example, E. Marshall (indeg =20) and E. Garfield (indeg =17) mostly contributed to the field as single authors and so appeared higher in the right panel of Table 2.

The first rows of Table 3 indicate the top authors in each time interval. If we restrict our attention to the authors who remained in the leading group at least for two time periods, we found a sequence starting from R. Merton (–1980) and E. Garfield (–1990), followed by D. Chubin and T. Chalmers (1971–1990), B. Squires, E. Marshall and G. Lundberg (1981–2000), and D. Rennie (1981–2005) and H. Reyes (1991–2005). D. Altman, R. Smith and D. Moher remained in the leading group for four periods (1991–2015). C. Castagna and H. Daniel were very active in the period (2001–2010). Later, the leading authors were L. Bornmann (2001–2015), M. Thoennessen, J. Lee, and K. Curtis (2006–2015).

The short names ambiguity problem started to emerge with the growth of number of different authors in the period 1991–2000 with Smith_R (R, RD, RA, RC) and Johnson_D (DM, DAW, DR, DL). In 2006–2015, we found an increasing presence of Chinese (and Korean) authors: Lee_J, Zhang_L, Lee_S, Wang_J, Wang_Y, and Wang_H. Because of the “three Zhang, four Li” effect (100 most common Chinese family names were shared by 85% of the population, Wikipedia (2016) all these names represent groups of authors. For example: Lee_J (Jaegab, Jaemu, Jae Hwa, Janette, Jeong Soon, Jin-Chuan, Ji-hoon, Jong-Kwon, Joong, Joseph, Joshua,Joy L, Ju, Juliet, etc.) and Zhang_L (L X, Lanying, Lei, Li, Lifeng, Lihui, Lin, Lina, Lixiang, Lujun).

More interestingly, our analysis showed that researchers in medicine were more active in studying peer review, though this can be simply due to the larger size of this community. Out of 47 top journals publishing papers on peer review, 23 journals were listed in medicine (see Table 4). Among these top journals, there are also Nature, Science, Scientist, but also specialized journals on science studies such as Scientometrics. The third one on the list is a rather new (from 2006) open access scientific journal, that is, PLoS ONE.

Table 5 indicates that the first papers on the “peer review” were published in chemistry, physics, medicine, sociology and general science journals. Some of these remained among leading journals on “peer review” also in the following periods: Phys Today (–2000), Lancet (–2005), Science, Nature (–2010), and Brit Med J (–2015). In the period (1971–1980) two medical journals New Eng J Med (1971–2000) and JAMA (1971–2015) joined the leading group. JAMA was in the period (1981–2005) the main journal. In this period, most of the leading outlets were medicine journals. In the period (1981–1990), Scientometrics (1981–2015) and Scientist (1981–2010) significantly contributed. In the period (2006–2010), Scientometrics was the main journal and PLoS ONE entered the picture of the leading group, joined in the period (2011–2015) by BMJ Open. Together with Scientometrics, these two journals were the most prolific in publishing research on peer review, whereas in the period (2011–2015), Science, Nature, JAMA, BMJ and Learn Pub disappeared from the top.

We also analyzed the main keywords (keywords in the papers and words in the titles). While obviously ’review’ and ’peer’ were top keywords, other more familiar in medicine appeared frequently, such as medical, health, medicine, care, patient, therapy, clinical, disease, cancer and surgery as did trial, research, quality, systematic, journal, study and analysis. More importantly, it is interesting to note that ’refereeing’ initially prevailed over ’peer review’, which became more popular later (see Fig. 5).

Fig. 5.

Fig. 5

Referee: peer: review

Citations

A citation network is usually (almost) acyclic. In the case of small strong components (cyclic parts) it can be transformed into a corresponding acyclic network using the preprint transformation. The preprint transformation replaces each work u from a strong component by a pair: published work u and its preprint version u. A published work could cite only preprints. Each strong component was replaced by a corresponding complete bipartite graph on pairs—see Fig. 6 and Batagelj et al. (2014, p. 83). We determined the importance of arcs (citations) and nodes (works) using SPC (Search Path Count) weights which require an acyclic network as input data. Using SPC weights, we identified important subnetworks using different methods: main path(s), cuts and islands. Details will be given in the following subsections. Alternative approches have been proposed by Eck and Waltman (2010, 2014); Leydesdorff and Ahrweiler (2014).

Fig. 6.

Fig. 6

Preprint transformation

We first restricted the original citation network Cite to its ‘boundary’ (45,917 nodes). This network, CiteB, had one large weak component (39,533 nodes), 155 small components (the largest of sizes 191, 46, 32, 31, 18), and 5589 isolated nodes. The isolated nodes correspond to the works with WoS description, not connected to the rest of the network, and citing only works that were cited at most twice—and therefore were removed from the network CiteB.

The network CiteB includes also 22 small strong components (4 of size 3 and 18 of size 2). Figure 7 shows selected strong components. In order to apply the SPC method, we transformed the citation network in an acyclic network, CiteAcy, using the preprint transformation. In order to make it connected, we added a common source node s and a common sink node t (see Fig. 8). The network CiteAcy has n=45,965 nodes and m=132,601 arcs.

Fig. 7.

Fig. 7

Selected strong components

Fig. 8.

Fig. 8

Search path count method (SPC)

Search path count method (SPC)

The search path count (SPC) method (Hummon and Doreian 1989) allowed us to determine the importance of arcs (and also nodes) in an acyclic network based on their position. It calculates counters n(uv) that count the number of different paths from some initial node (or the source s) to some terminal node (or the sink t) through the arc (uv). It can be proved that all sums of SPC counters over a minimal arc cut-set give the same value F—the flow through the network. Dividing SPC counters by F, we obtain normalized SPC weights

w(u,v)=n(u,v)F

that can be interpreted as the probability that a random s-t path passes through the arc (uv) (see Batagelj (2003) and Batagelj et al. (2014, pp. 75–81); this method is available in the program Pajek).

In the network CiteAcy, the normalized SPC weights were calculated. On their basis the main path, the CPM path, main paths for 100 arcs with the largest SPC weights (“Main paths” section), and link islands [20,200] (“Cuts and islands” section) were determined.

Main paths

In order to determine the important subnetworks based on SPC weights, Hummon and Doreian (1989) proposed the main path method. The main path starts in a link with the largest SPC weight and expands in both directions following the adjacent new link with the largest SPC weight. The CPM path is determined using the Critical Path Method from Operations Research (the sum of SPC weights on a path is maximal).

A problem with both main path methods is that they are unable to detect parallel developments and branchings. In July 2015 a new option was added to the program Pajek:

Network/acyclicnetwork/create(sub)network/mainpaths

with several suboptions for computing local and global main paths and for searching for Key-Route main path in acyclic networks (Liu and Lu 2012). Here, the procedure begins with a set of selected seed arcs and expands them in both directions as in the main path procedure.

Both main path and CPM procedure gave the same main path network presented in Fig. 9. Nodes with a name starting with = (for axample =JEFFERSO_T(2002)287-2786 in Fig. 9) correspond to a preprint version of a paper. In Fig. 10, main paths for 100 seed arcs with the largest SPC weights are presented. The main path was included in this subnetwork and there were additional 47 works on parallel paths. Many of these additional works were from authors of the main path (e.g., Rennie, Cicchetti, Altman, Bornmann, Opthof). It is interesting that Moher’s publications appear on main paths four times. He is also among the most cited authors and among authors who had the highest number of publications, but he did not appear on the main path.

Fig. 9.

Fig. 9

Main path

Fig. 10.

Fig. 10

Main paths for 100 largest weights

Main path publication pattern

Our analysis found 48 works on the main path. After looking at all these works in detail, we classified them into three groups determined by their time periods:

  • Before 1982: this includes works published mostly in social science and philosophy journals and social science books;

  • From 1983 to 2002: this includes works published almost exclusively in biomedical journals;

  • From 2003: this includes works published in specialized science studies journals.

The main path till 1982

This period includes important social science journals, such as American Journal of Sociology, American Sociologist, American Psychologist and Sociology of Education, and three foundational books. The most influential authors were: Meltzer (1949), Dennis (1954), Merton (1957), Polany (1958), Crane (1965, 1967), Bayer and Folger (1966), Storer (1966), Cartter (1966), Cole and Cole (1967), Zuckerman and Merton (1971), Ingelfinger (1974), Cicchetti (1980), and Peters and Ceci (1982). The most popular topics were: scientific productivity, bibliographies, knowledge, citation measures as measures of scientific accomplishment, scientific output and recognition, evaluation in science, referee system, journal evaluation, peer-evaluation system, review process, peer review practices.

The main path from 1983 to 2002

This period includes biomedical journals, mainly JAMA. It is worth noting that JAMA published many papers which were presented at the International Congress on Peer Review and Biomedical Publication since 1986. Among the more influential authors were: Rennie (1986, 1992, 1993, 1994, 2002), Smith (1994, 1999), and Jefferson with his collaborators Demicheli, Drummond, Smith, Yee, Pratt, Gale, Alderson, Wager and Davidoff (1995, 1998, 2002). The most popular topics were: the effects of blinding on review quality, research into peer review, guidelines for peer reviewing, monitoring the peer review performance, open peer review, bias in peer review system, measuring the quality of editorial peer review, development of meta-analysis and systematic reviews approaches.

The main path from 2003

Here, the situation changed again. Some specialized journals on science studies gained momentum, such as Scientometrics, Research Evaluation, Journal of Informetrics and JASIST. The most influential authors were: Bornmann and Daniel (2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2011) and Garcia, Rodriguez-Sanchez and Fdez-Valdivia (4 papers in 2015, 2016). Others popular publications were Lee et al. (2013) and Moustafa (2015). Research interest went to peer review of grant proposals, bias, referee selection and editor-referee/author links.

Cuts and islands

Cuts and islands are two approaches to identify important groups in a network. The importance is expressed by a selected property of nodes or links.

If we represent a given or computed property of nodes/links as a height of nodes/links and we immerse the network into a water up to a selected property threshold level, we obtain a cut (see the left picture in Fig. 11). By varying the level, we can obtain different islands—maximal connected subnetwork such that values of selected property inside island are larger than values on the island’s neighbors and the size (number of island’s nodes) is within a given range [kK] (see the right picture in Fig. 11). An island is simple iff it has a single peak [for details, see (Batagelj et al. 2014, pp. 54–61)].

Fig. 11.

Fig. 11

Cuts and islands

Zaveršnik and Batagelj (2004) developed very efficient algorithms to determine the islands hierarchy and list all the islands of selected sizes. They are available in Pajek.

Islands allow us also to overcome a typical problem of the main path approach, that is the selection of seed arcs. Here, we simply determined all islands and looked at the maximal SPC weight in each island. This allowed us to determine the importance of an island.

When searching for SPC link islands for the number of nodes between 20 and 200 (and between 20 and 100), we found 26 link islands (see Fig. 12). Many of these islands have a very short longest path, often a star-like structure (a node with its neighbors). These islands are not very interesting for our purpose. We visually identified “interesting” islands and inspected them in detail. In the following list, we present basic information for each of selected island, i.e., the number of nodes for the selection of 20–200 nodes (and 20–100), the maximal SPC weight in the island and a short description of the island:

  • Island 1. n=191(99), 0.297. Peer-review.

  • Island 2. n=191(96), 0.211×10-8. Discovery of different isotopes.

  • Island 3. n=178, 0.165×10-8. Biomass.

  • Island 7. n=42, 0.425×10-8. Athletic trainers.

  • Island 8. n=36, 0.191×10-4 Sport refereeing and decision-making.

  • Island 9. n=32, 0.793×10-10. Environment pollution.

  • Island 13. n=29, 0.451×10-10. Toxicity testing.

  • Island 23. n=22, 0.344×10-8. Peer-review in psychological sciences.

  • Island 24. n=21, 0.487×10-10. Molecular interaction.

Only Island 1 and Island 23 dealt directly with the peer review. Other islands represented collateral stories. The Island 1 on peer-review was the most important because it had the maximal SPC weight at least 10.000 times higher than the next one, i.e., Island 8 on sport refereeing.

Fig. 12.

Fig. 12

SPC islands [20,200]

For the sake of readability, we extracted from Island 1 a sub-island of size in range [20, 100], which is shown in Fig. 13. It contains the main path and strongly overlaps with the main paths in Fig. 8. The list of all publications from the main path (coded with 1), main paths (coded with 2) and SPC link island (20–100) (coded with 3) is shown in Table 6 in the “Appendix”. We found 105 works in the joint list. Only 9 publications were exclusively on main paths and only 10 publications were exclusively in the SPC link island. The three groups typology of works also held for the list of all 105 publications.

Fig. 13.

Fig. 13

SPC link Island 1 [100]

Table 6.

List of works on main path (1), main paths (2) and island (3)—part 1

Year Code First author Title Journal
1949 123 Meltzer, BN The productivity of social scientists AM J SOCIOL
1954 123 Dennis, W Bibliographies of eminent scientists SCIENTIFIC M
1957 123 Merton, RK Priorities in scientific discovery—a chapter in the sociology of science AM SOCIOL REV
1958 123 Polanyi, M Personal knowledge: towards a post-critical philosophy UP Chicago
1965 123 Crane, D Scientists at major and minor universities AM SOCIOL REV
1966 123 Bayer, AE Some correlates of citation measure of productivity in science SOCIOL EDUC
1966 123 Storer, NW The social system of science HRW
1966 123 Cartter, A An Assessment of quality in graduate education ACE
1967 123 Crane, D Gatekeepers of science—some factors affecting selection of articles... AM SOCIOL
1967 123 Cole, S Scientific output and recognition—study in operation of reward system... AM SOCIOL REV
1971 123 Zuckerma.H Patterns of evaluation in science—...of referee system MINERVA
1972 23 Garfield, E Citation analysis as a tool in journal evaluation—journals can be ranked... SCIENCE
1974 123 Ingelfin.FJ Peer review in biomedical publication AM J MED
1978 23 Wilson, JD 70th annual-meeting of american-society-for-clinical-investigation,... J CLIN INVEST
1978 23 Gottfredson, SD Evaluating psychological-research reports—...of quality judgments AM PSYCHOL
1980 23 Ruderfer, M The fallacy of peer-review—judgment without science and a case-history SPECULAT SCI TECHNOL
1980 123 Cicchetti, DV Reliability of reviews for the american-psychologist... AM PSYCHOL
1982 123 Peters, DP Peer-review practices of psychological journals—the fate... BEHAV BRAIN SCI
1985 123 Bailar, JC Journal peer-review—the need for a research agenda NEW ENGL J MED
1985 23 Moossy, J Anonymous authors, anonymous referees—an editorial exploration J NEUROPATH EXP NEUR
1986 123 Rennie, D Guarding the guardians—a conference on editorial peer-review JAMA
1986 23 Kochar, MS The peer-review of manuscripts in need for improvement J CHRON DIS
1987 123 Robin, ED Peer-review in medical journals CHEST
1988 23 Cleary, JD Blind versus nonblind review—survey of selected medical journals DRUG INTEL CLIN PHAR
1990 123 Mcnutt, RA The effects of blinding on the quality of peer-review—a randomized trial JAMA
1990 23 Rennie, D Editorial peer-review in biomedical publication—the 1st-international-congress JAMA
1990 3 Chalmers, I A cohort study of summary reports of controlled trials JAMA
1991 23 Cicchetti, DV The reliability of peer-review for manuscript and grant submissions... BEHAV BRAIN SCI
1991 23 Easterbrook, PJ Publication bias in clinical research LANCET
1992 3 Debellefeuille, C The fate of abstracts submitted to a cancer meeting... ANN ONCOL
1992 123 Rennie, D Suspended judgment—editorial peer-review—let us put it on trial CONTROL CLIN TRIALS
1992 23 Dickersin, K Factors influencing publication of research results—follow-up of... JAMA
1993 123 Rennie, D More peering into editorial peer-review JAMA
1994 23 Scherer, RW Full publication of results initially presented in abstracts—a metaanalysis JAMA
1994 23 Goodman, SN Manuscript quality before and after peer-review and editing at Annals... ANN INTERN MED

Conclusions

This article provided a quantitative analysis of peer review as an emerging field of research by revealing patterns and connections between authors, fields and journals from 1950 to 2016. By collecting all available sources from WoS, we were capable of tracing the emergence and evolution of this field of research by identifying relevant authors, publications and journals, and revealing important development stages. By constructing several one-mode networks (i.e., co-authorship network, citation network) and two-mode networks, we found connections and collective patterns.

However, our work has certain limitations. First, given that data were extracted from WoS, works from disciplines and journals less covered by this tool could have been under-represented. This especially holds for humanities and social sciences, which are less comprehensively covered by WoS and more represented in Scopus and even more in GoogleScholar (e.g., Halevi et al. 2017), which also lists books and book chapters (e.g., Halevi et al. 2016). However, given that GoogleScholar does not permit large-scale data collection, a possible validation of our findings by using Scopus could be more feasible.

Furthermore, given that data were obtained using the queries “peer review*” and refereeing and that these terms could be used in many fields, e.g., sports, our dataset included some works that probably had little to do with peer review as a research field. For example, when reading the abstracts of certain works included in our dataset, we found works reporting ’Published by Elsevier Ltd. Selection and/or peer review under responsibility of’. An extra effort (unfortunately almost prohibitive) in cleaning the dataset manually would help filtering out irrelevant records. However, by using the main path and island methods, we successfully identified the most important and relevant publications on peer review without incurring in excessive cost of data cleaning or biasing our findings significantly.

Secondly, another limitation of our work is that we did not treat author name disambiguation, as evident in Table 3. This could be at least partially solved by developing automatic disambiguation procedures, although the right solution would be the adoption by WoS and publishers of the standards such as ResearcherID and ORCID to allow for a clear identification since from the beginning. To control for this, we could include in WoS2Pajek additional options to create short author names that will allow manual correction of names of critical authors.

With all these caveats, our study allowed us to circumscribe the field, capture its emergence and evolution and identify the most influential publications. Our main path procedures and islands method used SPC weights on citation arcs. It is important to note that the 47 publications from the main path were found in all other obtained lists of the most influential publications. They could be considered as the main corpus of knowledge for any newcomer in the field. More importantly, at least to have a dynamic picture of the field, we found these publications to be segmented in three phases defined by specific three time periods: before 1982, with works mostly published in social sciences journals (sociology, psychology and education); from 1983 to 2002, with works published almost exclusively in biomedical journals, mainly JAMA; and after 2003, with works published more preferably in science studies journals (e.g., Scientometrics, Research Evaluation, Journal of Informetrics).

This typology indicates the emergence and evolution of peer review as a research field. Initiatives to promote data sharing on peer review in scholarly journals and funding agencies (e.g., Casnici et al. 2017; Squazzoni et al. 2017) as well as the establishment of regular funding schemes to support research on peer review would help to strengthen the field and promote tighter connections between specialists.

Results also showed that while the term “peer review” itself was relatively unknown before 1970 (“referee” was more frequently used), publications on peer review significantly grew especially after 1990.

Acknowledgements

This work was partly supported by the Slovenian Research Agency (Research Program P1-0294 and Research Projects J1-5433 and J5-5537) and was based upon work from COST Action TD1306 “New frontiers of peer review”—PEERE. Previous versions took advantages from comments and suggestions by many PEERE members, including Francisco Grimaldo, Daniel Torres-Salinas, Ana Marusic and Bahar Mehmani.

Appendix

The structure of names in constructed networks

The usual ISI name of a work as used in the CR field, e.g., graphic file with name 11192_2017_2522_Figa_HTML.jpg has the following structure graphic file with name 11192_2017_2522_Figb_HTML.jpg where AU1 is the first author’s name and SO[:20] is the string of the initial (up to) 20 characters in the SO field.

In WoS records, the same work can have different ISI names. To improve precision, the program WoS2Pajek supports also short names [similar to the names used in HISTCITE output (Garfield et al. 2003)]. They have the format: graphic file with name 11192_2017_2522_Figc_HTML.jpg

For example: TREGENZA_T(2002)17:349. From the last names with prefixes VAN, DE, etc. the space is deleted. Unusual names start with a character * or $. The name [ANONYMOUS] is used for anonymous authors.

This construction of names of works provides a good balance between the synonymy problem (different names designating the same work) and the homonymy problem (a name designating different works). We treated the remaining synomyms and homonyms in the network data as a noise. If their effect surfaces into final results, we either corrected our copy of WoS data and repeated the analysis, or, if the correction required excessive work, simply reported the problem. A typical such case was the author name [ANONYMOUS] or combinations with some very frequent last names—in MathSciNet there are 85 mathematicians corresponding to the short name SMITH_R and 1792 mathematicians corresponding to the short name WANG_Y.

The composed keywords were decomposed in single words. For example, ‘peer review’ into ‘peer’ and ‘review’. On keywords obtained from titles of works we applied the lemmatization (using the Monty Lingua library).

The name ***** denoted a missing journal name.

Details about important works

In Tables 67 and 8 a list of works on main path (1), main paths (2) and island (3) is presented. Only the first authors are listed.

Table 7.

List of works on main path (1), main paths (2) and island (3)—part 2

Year Code First author Title Journal
1994 23 Fisher, M The effects of blinding on acceptance of research papers by peer-review JAMA
1994 123 Rennie, D The 2nd international-congress on peer-review in biomedical publication JAMA
1994 123 Smith, R Promoting research into peer-review BRIT MED J
1995 123 Jefferson, T Are guidelines for peer-reviewing economic evaluations necessary... HEALTH ECON
1995 23 Moher, D Assessing the quality of randomized controlled trials... CONTROL CLIN TRIALS
1996 23 Jadad, AR Assessing the quality of reports of randomized clinical trials... CONTROL CLIN TRIALS
1996 123 Drummond, MF Guidelines for authors and peer reviewers of economic submissions to the BMJ BRIT MED J
1996 23 Begg, C Improving the quality of reporting of randomized controlled trials—the CONSORT statement JAMA
1998 3 Godlee, F Effect on the quality of peer review of blinding reviewers and... JAMA
1998 3 Justice, AC Does masking author identity improve peer review quality?—a randomized controlled trial JAMA
1998 23 Weber, EJ Unpublished research from a medical specialty meeting—Why investigators fail to publish JAMA
1998 23 van Rooyen, S Effect of blinding and unmasking on the quality of peer review—A randomized trial JAMA
1998 23 Black, N What makes a good reviewer and a good review for a general medical journal? JAMA
1998 3 Campanario, JM Peer review for journals as it stands today—Part 1 SCI COMMUN
1998 123 Jefferson, T Evaluating the BMJ guidelines for economic submissions... JAMA
1998 3 Howard, L Peer review and editorial decision-making BRIT J PSYCHIAT
1998 123 Rennie, D Peer review in Prague JAMA
1998 2 Hatch, CL Perceived value of providing peer reviewers with abstracts and preprints... JAMA
1998 23 Moher, D Does quality of reports of randomised trials affect estimates of intervention efficacy... LANCET
1998 23 Callaham, ML Positive-outcome bias and other limitations in the outcome of research abstracts... JAMA
1999 3 van Rooyen, S Effect of open peer review on quality of reviews and on reviewers’ recommendations... BRIT MED J
1999 123 Smith, R Opening up BMJ peer review—a beginning that should lead to complete transparency BRIT MED J
1999 123 Goldbeck-Wood, S Evidence on peer review—scientific quality control or smokescreen? BRIT MED J
1999 2 Moher, D Improving the quality of reports of meta-analyses of randomised controlled trials: QUOROM LANCET
2000 123 Walsh, E Open peer review: a randomised controlled trial BRIT J PSYCHIAT
2000 2 Stroup, DF Meta-analysis of observational studies in epidemiology—A proposal for reporting JAMA
2001 2 Altman, DG The revised CONSORT statement for reporting randomized trials... ANN INTERN MED
2001 2 Moher, D The CONSORT statement: revised recommendations for improving the quality of reports... LANCET
2002 123 Jefferson, T Effects of editorial peer review—a systematic review JAMA
2002 123 Jefferson, T Measuring the quality of editorial peer review JAMA
2002 123 Rennie, D Fourth international congress on peer review in biomedical publication JAMA
2002 23 Rowland, F The peer-review process LEARN PUBL
2002 123 Opthof, T The significance of the peer review process against the background of bias... CARDIOVASC RES
2003 23 Hojat, M Impartial judgment by the “gatekeepers” of science:... ADV HEALTH SCI EDUC
2003 23 Wets, K Post-publication filtering and evaluation: Faculty of 1000 LEARN PUBL
Table 8.

List of works on main path (1), main paths (2) and island (3)—part 3

Year Code First author Title Journal
2004 2 Chan, AW Empirical evidence for selective reporting of outcomes in randomized trials... JAMA
2005 23 Bornmann, L Selection of research fellowship recipients by committee peer review... SCIENTOMETRICS
2005 123 Daniel, HD Publications as a measure of scientific advancement and of scientists’ productivity LEARN PUBL
2005 123 Bornmann, L Committee peer review at an international research foundation:... RES EVALUAT
2005 23 Bornmann, L Criteria used by a peer review committee for selection of research fellows... INT J SELECT ASSESS
2005 2 Ioannidis, JPA Why most published research findings are false PLOS MED
2006 123 Bornmann, L Selecting scientific excellence through committee peer review—a citation analysis... SCIENTOMETRICS
2006 23 Bornmann, L Potential sources of bias in research fellowship assessments:... RES EVALUAT
2007 123 Bornmann, L Convergent validation of peer review decisions using the h index... J INFORMETR
2007 23 Bornmann, L Gatekeepers of science—effects of external reviewers’ attributes... J INFORMETR
2007 23 Bornmann, L Row-column (RC) association model applied to grant peer review SCIENTOMETRICS
2008 23 Marsh, HW Improving the peer-review process for grant applications... AM PSYCHOL
2008 123 Bornmann, L Selecting manuscripts for a high-impact journal through peer review... J AM SOC INF SCI TEC
2008 23 Bornmann, L The effectiveness of the peer review process: inter-referee agreement... ANGEW CHEM INT EDIT
2008 23 Bornmann, L Latent Markov modeling applied to grant peer review J INFORMETR
2008 23 Bornmann, L Are there better indices for evaluation purposes than the h index?... J AM SOC INF SCI TEC
2009 123 Bornmann, L The luck of the referee draw: the effect of exchanging reviews LEARN PUBL
2009 2 Opthof, T The Hirsch-index: a simple, new tool for the assessment of scientific output... NETH HEART J
2009 2 van der Heyden, MAG Fraud and misconduct in science: the stem cell seduction NETH HEART J
2009 23 Bornmann, L The influence of the applicants’ gender on the modeling of a peer review... SCIENTOMETRICS
2010 23 Bornmann, L The manuscript reviewing process: Empirical research on review... LIBR INFORM SCI RES
2011 123 Bornmann, L Scientific Peer Review ANNU REV INFORM SCI
2011 123 Bornmann, L A multilevel modelling approach to investigating the...of editorial decisions:... J R STAT SOC A STAT
2011 3 Franceschet, M The first Italian research assessment exercise: A bibliometric perspective J INFORMETR
2011 23 Waltman, L On the correlation between bibliometric indicators and peer review:... SCIENTOMETRICS
2012 23 Sen, CK Rebound peer review: a viable recourse for aggrieved authors? ANTIOXID REDOX SIGN
2013 123 Lee, CJ Bias in peer review J AM SOC INF SCI TEC
2014 3 Bornmann, L Do we still need peer review? an argument for change J ASSOC INF SCI TECH
2015 3 Siler, K Measuring the effectiveness of scientific gatekeeping P NATL ACAD SCI USA
2015 123 Garcia, JA The principal-agent problem in peer review J ASSOC INF SCI TECH
2015 123 Garcia, JA Adverse selection of reviewers J ASSOC INF SCI TECH
2015 123 Moustafa, K Don’t infer anything from unavailable data SCIENTOMETRICS
2015 123 Garcia, JA Bias and effort in peer review J ASSOC INF SCI TECH
2015 123 Garcia, JA The author–editor game SCIENTOMETRICS
2016 123 Rodriguez-Sanchez, R Evolutionary games between authors and their editors APPL MATH COMPUT

Contributor Information

Vladimir Batagelj, Email: vladimir.batagelj@fmf.uni-lj.si.

Anuška Ferligoj, Email: anuska.ferligoj@fdv.uni-lj.si.

Flaminio Squazzoni, Email: flaminio.squazzoni@unibs.it.

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