First, I applaud attempts to change the peer review landscape. It's broken. But this policy isn't it.
To call this "Peer Review without gatekeeping" is extremely disingenuous. It makes gatekeeping even worse
What is the point of peer review? Journals review for technical correctness and impact. Where they lay on the continuum varies between journals and their priorities
Behold! The Great Peer Review Matrix!
Any journal (or any publishing venue really) can be placed on this chart somewhere
Your high impact journals peer review for both impact and content. They're in the upper left
Journals such as PLoS ONE or PeerJ that review for technical correctness but not impact are in the bottom left quatrant (no judgements). Journals that start to fuzz the line (like a lot of the MDPI venues) start to move toward the right
Preprint servers such as bioRxiv that do not evaluate correctness or impact are in the bottom right quadrant
NOTHING SHOULD BE IN THE TOP RIGHT QUADRANT
This new eLife policy gives me pause. Maybe it could be technically consistent if every submitted paper was put through the system. But then it's just another preprint server and we have plenty of those already
Instead, the editorial board will decide which papers get through. That's not different from how it works everywhere. But the crucial difference here is that every paper selected by the board is "published"
Yes they make a distinction between "accepted" and "reviewed" but it all has that eLife shine and folk won't make the distinction, especially if all categories are indexed
But the editorial board can't realistically review all papers for technical correctness (they don't have the expertise in every field). So they're defacto reviewing for impact
So we have a situation where we have a semi-glam journal reviewing for impact, BUT NOT TECHNICAL CORRECTNESS. They're in the forbidden quadrant
eLife seems to be trying to have their cake and eat it too. They want the status that comes with being a glam journal, but want to be able to say "We don't act like other glam journals".
They're correct. They're worse.
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During the last couple months of her PhD, @renuka_joseph was doing some mosquito virus experiments. To get good membrane feeds, we routinely deprive mosquitoes of sugar & water for 24hrs before. Renuka didn't bother separating the males out first because who cares about males?
@renuka_joseph After the feed she mentioned to me (paraphrasing) "hey, I noticed something weird, some of the males took blood from the membrane feeder"
65. If you want to know what your University employer (or, any institution or person really) wants and values, don't listen to what they tell you. Instead, take careful note of where they spend their money.
Anyone watch "Beforigners"? A Norwegian buddy cop time travel show where folk randomly skip forward in time from neolithic, viking, or Victorian England eras & have to integrate into modern society. Follows a Norwegian cop & his viking partner as they solve crimes. It's a drama.
By "Modern Society" I mean present-day Oslo of course. Luckily for some reason everyone that pops through time, from the cavemen to the Victorian English folk, speak Norwegian
It's been quite a while since I did a horological Tweet. Here's a cool "H. Hamlet and Co." pocket watch that I acquired recently
The "Hamlet" watch company was one of the trade names for the New York Standard Watch company, but that's not what this is
Did you know that, back in the day, some of the finest watches were made by American companies (Elgin, Hamilton, Waltham etc...). They were so good, that watchmakers in other companies made fakes and counterfeits. Countries like... Switzerland.
52. Grants are not just resources to do science. They are also influence, power, & protection. Not all grant $ is equal in this regard; some $ sources are prized above others. Learn which is which
If you are lucky to have lots of $, don't abuse the influence & power it gives you
53. There is no such thing as a "Perfect" grant. There is not even such thing as a "Good" grant. The only thing that matters is a "Funded" grant. Let go of the idea of the perfect grant. The quest for perfection is a fools errand & counterproductive to the goal of being funded.
54. If you are unclear about a rule in the proposal instructions, or the RFA, do not try to interpret the rules yourself. No one at the funder cares about your specific interpretation about the rules. Ask for specific clarification BEFORE submitting the application.
50. If a University policy puzzles you, and you want to know why it exists, or why things are being done that way, the answer is money.
It may not be directly obvious, but the answer is ALWAYS money
51. Funding begats funding
52. Grants are not just resources to do science. They are also influence, power, & protection. Not all grant $ is equal in this regard; some $ sources are prized above others. Learn which is which
If you are lucky to have lots of $, don't abuse the influence & power it gives you