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An exploration of referees’ comments published in open peer review journals: The characteristics of review language and the association between review scrutiny and citations
[Peer Review for Journals: Evidence on Quality Control, Fairness, and Innovation]

Author

Listed:
  • Dietmar Wolfram
  • Peiling Wang
  • Fuad Abuzahra

Abstract

Journals that adopt open peer review (OPR), where review reports of published articles are publicly available, provide an opportunity to study both review content characteristics and quantitative aspects of the overall review process. This study investigates two areas relevant to the quality assessment of manuscript reviews. First, do journal policies for reviewers to identify themselves influence how reviewers evaluate the merits of a manuscript based on the relative frequency of hedging terms and research-related terms appearing in their reviews? Second, is there an association between the number of reviews/reviewers and the manuscript’s research impact once published as measured by citations? We selected reviews for articles published in 17 OPR journals from 2017 to 2018 to examine the incidence of reviewers’ uses of hedging terms and research-related terms. The results suggest that there was little difference in the relative use of hedging term usage regardless of whether reviewers were required to identify themselves or if this was optional, indicating that the use of hedging in review contents was not influenced by journal requirements for reviewers to identify themselves. There was a larger difference observed for research-related terminology. We compared the total number of reviews for a manuscript, rounds of revisions, and the number of reviewers with the number of Web of Science citations the article received since publication. The findings reveal that scrutiny by more reviewers or conducting more reviews or rounds of review do not result in more impactful papers for most of the journals studied. Implications for peer review practice are discussed.

Suggested Citation

  • Dietmar Wolfram & Peiling Wang & Fuad Abuzahra, 2021. "An exploration of referees’ comments published in open peer review journals: The characteristics of review language and the association between review scrutiny and citations [Peer Review for Journa," Research Evaluation, Oxford University Press, vol. 30(3), pages 314-322.
  • Handle: RePEc:oup:rseval:v:30:y:2021:i:3:p:314-322.
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    File URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10.1093/reseval/rvab005
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    Cited by:

    1. Sun, Zhuanlan, 2024. "Textual features of peer review predict top-cited papers: An interpretable machine learning perspective," Journal of Informetrics, Elsevier, vol. 18(2).
    2. Hou, Li & Wu, Qiang & Xie, Yundong, 2024. "Does open identity of peer reviewers positively relate to citations?," Journal of Informetrics, Elsevier, vol. 18(1).

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