New article on peer review in Nature Scientific Reports: "How important tasks are performed: peer review" by T. Hartonen and M.J. Alaya
Abstract
The advancement of various fields of science depends on the actions of
individual scientists via the peer review process. The referees' work patterns
and stochastic nature of decision making both relate to the particular features
of refereeing and to the universal aspects of human behavior. Here, we show that
the time a referee takes to write a report on a scientific manuscript depends on
the final verdict. The data is compared to a model, where the review takes place
in an ongoing competition of completing an important composite task with a large
number of concurrent ones - a Deadline -effect. In peer review human decision
making and task completion combine both long-range predictability and stochastic
variation due to a large degree of ever-changing external “friction”. http://www.nature.com/srep/2013/130417/srep01679/full/srep01679.html?WT.ec_id=SREP-20130423
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